How a Contract May Be Discharged
There are
four ways in which a contract may be discharged as follows:
Performance
(i.e. fulfilling and complying with all the contract terms)
Agreement
(i.e. the parties agree to discharge the contract – be careful, as both parties
must usually give consideration for the agreement to discharge to be legally
binding)
Breach
(i.e. not complying with/fulfilling the contractual term(s) as required by
virtue of the contract) To read up a similar post to this, click here
Frustration
(i.e. the contract becoming impossible but due to no fault of any party – but
please see below)
1. Performance
General
rule: all the terms of the contract must be precisely completed to discharge
liability.
There are
however several exceptions to this rule:
(i) Divisible contracts
An entire
contract requires complete performance by either or both parties, usually there
is an express provision saying that the contract is entire and no part of the
contract may be severed.
A divisible
contract is where there are several amounts of consideration and upon
performance of one stage the party is entitled to payment of that amount.
Therefore with a divisible contract it is arguable that performance of certain
elements within the contract entitles that party to part payment. A simple
example of this would be where there is payment for the delivery of goods and
installation where there are completely separate amounts “payable on
delivery" and “payable on completion of installation". It is not
always this simple though!
See the
following contrasting cases:
C
contracted to construct two houses and stables for £565. C carried out work to
the value of about £333, but did not complete the works and refused to finish
the work. The other party ended up completing the buildings because of C’s
refusal. C could not sue for £333, as he had failed to fulfill all the terms of
the contract and the contract was indivisible.
Sumpter V Hedges
[1898]
A
shipwright agreed to undertake repairs to a ship, but there was no agreement on
what was payable when. The shipwright refused to do any works whatsoever until
he received some of the monies due. It was held that the shipwright was not
bound to complete the repairs before claiming some payment.
Why is
this? – Although there is no real difference as such between this case and the
last one, you could say that it is a commercial reality/custom that some
payment would be made at the start to buy materials.
Roberts V Havelock (1832)
ii) Acceptance of partial performance
If a party
accepts partial performance he must pay a “reasonable price" for that
partial performance. This acceptance of the partial performance however must be
freely agreed, so there must not have been force, duress, etc. Effectively
there must have been a new agreement that partial payment would be made.
A ship
could not deliver goods in Hamburg port (as required under the contract) due to
no fault of either party. The party awaiting delivery of the goods agreed with
the ship owners that delivery could take place at another port. A contract was
implied from the agreement to deliver elsewhere and therefore the ship owners
were entitled to payment.
Christy V Row
[1808]
iii) Completion prevented by promisee
If a party
is prevented by the other party from performing all terms under the contract,
then a quantum meruit action in quasi-contract may be brought (i.e. a
reasonable price is paid for the work actually done even though it would not
normally amount to fulfilling all the terms).
Here C had
contracted with a published to write a book. However the publisher later
decided it would not publish the book. The writer was entitled to reasonable
payment on a quantum meruit basis.
Planche V Colburn
[1831]
iv) Substantial performance
Where
there has been substantial performance and there have only been minor defects
usually the contract price is payable less a sum for the defects.
In this
case there were only minor building defects.
Dakin V Lee [1916]
v) Tender of Performance
This
occurs if the first party needs the other party’s help to complete the
contract, but the other party refuses.
Here the
other party refused to accept delivery, but it was held that attempted delivery
amounted to substantial performance. [This is similar to the “performance
prevented by the other party" situation].
Startup V M'Donald
[1843]
Is Time Of The
Essence In A Contract?
Section 41 Law of
Property Act 1925 confirms time is generally not of the essence and therefore
delay only entitles a party to damages unless:-
i) express
provision stating that ‘time is of the essence’ (i.e. the contract contains an
express time).
ii) Notice
has been given by either or both parties to the other while the contract is
being carried out (e.g. “I give you notice that time is now of the
essence", etc.)
iii) Due
to the circumstances in which the contract is made or from the subject matter
of the contract time is of the essence (e.g. shares which fluctuate very quickly
are being bought).
2. Agreement
Bilateral
Discharge (i.e. discharge by both parties)
How can
contracts be terminated?
Accord and
Satisfaction – each agrees to release the other from their liabilities under
the contract
Rescission
and Satisfaction – the parties rescind the first contract and replace it with a
new contract (the parties could alternatively vary the contract).
Variation
of the original contract – Note: to be binding there should be consideration or
the parties should enter into a deed.
Waiver
(e.g. a party agrees expressly or by conduct they will not enforce their legal
rights)
Unilateral
Discharge
1. Release
the other party from performance – this should be by deed or in return for
consideration
2. ‘Accord
and satisfaction’ is also possible (e.g. the part payment of a debt).
3. Breach
A breach =
a failure to perform one or more terms of a contract.
A serious
breach entitles the other party to treat the contract as discharged. How?
Either
party may expressly or from conduct at a point before performance is required
state he does not intend to fulfill his obligations under the contract (= an
anticipatory breach); or
He may in
fact breach the contract that amounts to a substantial breach.
Anticipatory
Breach
What is
the other party entitled to do once he is informed of an anticipatory breach?
He may
either accept the breach (thereby bringing the contract to an end entitling the
party to claim a remedy); or
Affirm the
contract (thereby allowing the contract to continue – perhaps waiving the
breach).
Note that
a party who does nothing may be impliedly waiving their right to a remedy,
especially if nothing is done for a long time – Panchaud Freres SA v
Establishments General Grain Co [1970].
Always
remember that estoppel may also be brought in here.
An
innocent party is not required to wait until the breach to bring an action –
Hochster v De La Tour [1853].
If the
innocent party affirms the contract after an anticipatory breach, he still has
to complete his own part of the bargain under the contract.
This case
said that it is necessary to see if there has been “an absolute refusal to
perform the contract". If so, consider whether the innocent party entitled
not to perform his part of the contract.
Lord Selborne Stated In
Mersey Steel V Naylor Benzon (1884)
Remember
to apply the rules on the effect of a breach i.e. a breach of a warranty is
treated as less serious than a breach of condition and the remedies are
accordingly very different.
Frustration
Frustration
covers situations where the contract has become impossible to perform or it has
lost its commercial purpose, but neither party caused the frustration.
Two
alternative tests exist for frustration:
(1) The Implied Term Test
Caldwell
contracted to allow Taylor to use a hall for concerts. However in the meantime
a fire destroyed the hall. It was held that the claim for breach of contract
fails, as the fire caused the purpose to be fulfilled through no fault of
either party. Here the contract depended upon the existence of an object and as
the object no longer existed there was frustration.
Taylor V Caldwell [1863]
This case
suggested that where the parties would have agreed that upon the occurrence of
the matter in question the parties would consider the contract at an end.
Lord Loreburn In FA Tamplin
V Anglo-Mexican Petroleum [1916]
(2) The Radical Change In The Obligation Test.
The
'radical change in the obligation' test in this case was:-
1. Look at
the contract in light of the contract and surrounding circumstances when it is
first entered into.
2. Look at
the new circumstances and consider what would happen if the contractual terms
were applied to these new circumstances.
3. Compare the two contractual obligations and
see if there is a radical or fundamental change.
Lords Reid And Radcliffe In
Davis Contractors V Fareham UDC [1956]
Lord
Wilberforce said the test to be applied (out of the two) is the one that is
fairest to the particular circumstances of the case in question.
National Carriers V
Panalpina [1981]
2.
Examples of frustrated contracts
i)
Destruction of the specific subject matter of the contract
The
destruction of the specific object required for performance of the contract
frustrates it where without the object the contract cannot take place.
Taylor V Caldwell
[1863]
ii)
Personal Incapacity of one of the parties
A drummer
was contracted to work every day, but due to illness could only work four
nights a week. The drummer’s contract had been frustrated, because the
commercial purpose could no longer be fulfilled, as it was necessary to employ
another drummer.
Condor V The Baron
Knights [1966]
iii)
Non–occurrence of an event
An event
may frustrate the contract if it is not caused by either party and could not be
anticipated beforehand (e.g. a fire/lightning/flooding, etc.).
A room was
hired to view the coronation of Edward VII, but it was postponed. Both parties
knew the whole purpose of the contract was to watch the coronation and as it
was not held the contract was frustrated.
Krell V Henry
[1903]
Here Herne
Bay contracted to hire a boat to take passenger to see a naval event which was
to occur because of the coronation. However the coronation did not take place.
The contract had not been frustrated, as there were two purposes for the
contract and one was still possible i.e. to transport passengers around and
this was still possible albeit a lot more unprofitably.
Herne Bay Steamboat Co V Hutton [1903]
iv) Government interference
Here Kerr agreed to build a reservoir and started 2 years
of work, but due to a wartime statute had to stop work for what turned out to
be 6 years in total (although due to uncertainty of war the amount of time work
would have to be halted for was not known at the time). There was frustration,
as the nature of the contract had completely changed.
Metropolitan Water Board V Dick Kerr [1918]
v) Subsequent illegality
This case concerned the supply of wheat. Due to wartime
the government later passed legislation acquiring all rights in wheat. If the
supplier had supplied the wheat it would have been illegal, therefore
frustration had taken place.
Re Shipton, Anderson and Harrison Brothers [1915]
vi) Delay
A long and unexpected delay may frustrate a contract –
Jackson v Union Marine Insurance [1873]
3. Limits on The Doctrine
Note the following general principles regarding
limitations of the doctrine:-
i) Express provision overrides the common law/equity
ii) Increase in costs/loss of profit/more difficulty in
performing a contract is not sufficient – it must be impossible to carry out
the contract, rather than merely more difficult
The House of Lords held that unforeseen events that make
a contract more onerous than previously anticipated did not frustrate it if it
was still possible to complete it.
- This only really restates that the fact that a contract
becomes more difficult to complete than previously anticipated does not mean
there is frustration.
Davis Contractors V Fareham UDC [1956]
iii) The frustrating event must not have been
self-induced.
- For example in Maritime National Fish v Ocean Trawlers
[1935] the charterer chose a charting licence for one contract over another.
Although they could have argued illegality, the fact that there would have been
illegality through their own fault. They really should not have entered into
the contract in the first place!
4. Effects of the
doctrine
Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 provides that
losses may be divided between the parties as the court sees fit where
frustration discharges a contract.
Section 1(2) provides three rules:
Money paid prior to the frustrating event is recoverable,
and
Money payable prior to the frustrating event is not
longer payable
If the party who would have been due money incurred
losses prior to performing the contract, the court may award that party such
expenses up to the limit of the money paid/payable before the frustrating
event.
A pop concert was due at a stadium, but it was later
declared unsafe and could not legally be used. No alternative venue was
available and the concert could not take place. Both parties had incurred costs
- the pop concert promoters had paid the defendants $412,500 for the venue and
naturally wanted to recover these monies relying on s1(2) of the 1943 Act.
The stadium owners counterclaimed for breach of contract
by the promoters in failing to secure the permit for the concert. The fact the
stadium was declared unsafe was the frustrating event, not the lack of the
permit and the counterclaim was dismissed. In addition no deduction was given.
Walton Harvey Ltd V Gamerco V ICM/Fair Warning (Agency) Ltd [1995]
(ii) Valuable benefit
Section 1(3) provides: “If one party has, by reason of
anything done by the other party in performance of the contract, obtained a
valuable benefit (other than money) before the frustrating event, he may be
ordered to pay a sum in respect of it, if the court considers it just, having regard
to all the circumstances of the case."
Hunt had a contract with the Libyan government to search
for oil in Libya. BP financed him in return for a share in profits. When oil
was found the government claimed all rights in it, therefore only the Libyan government
had any title to the oil. BP had spent $87 million in the search for the oil.
BP was awarded $35 million recognising the partial performance of the contract
which had given a valuable benefit to the other party.
BP Exploration V Hunt [1982]
You will see from the cases above that the powers are
discretionary and the courts will try and achieve fairness between the parties
where there has been frustration.
iii) Section 2(5)
of the Act provides that the Act does not apply to:
- Contracts with express (or implied) provisions which to
deal with the frustrating event;
- Most charterparties;
- Contracts governing the transportation of goods by sea;
- Insurance contracts;
- Contracts for the sale of certain perishable goods,
which perish before the buyer assumes the risk of the goods (This is probably
because the seller is most likely at fault and can recover the monies on
insurance).
Source: Law Teacher
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Source: Law Teacher
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