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Contracts - week 2. Consideration I cried because I had no shoes, 'till I met a man who had no feet. So I said, 'You got any shoes you're not using?' ~ Steven Wright. Consideration. Defining Consideration
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Contracts - week 2 Consideration I cried because I had no shoes, 'till I met a man who had no feet. So I said, 'You got any shoes you're not using?' ~ Steven Wright
Consideration • Defining Consideration • some act or forbearance involving legal detriment to the promisee, or the promise of such an act or forbearance, furnished by the promisee as the agreed price of the promise. • Detriment • Bargain
Consideration • Must flow both ways: consideration consideration A B
Consideration • Australian Woollen Mills v Commonwealth • AWM claimed unilateral contract • Cth promised to pay subsidy • AWM purchased wool • The purchase of wool not good consideration - not done at request of promisee • No quid pro quo - ‘this for that’
Consideration • A promises B - ‘I will pay you $1000 on your arrival in Sydney’ • B travels to Sydney • Has B provided consideration? - No • No quid pro quo unless A requested it • Conditional gift. Travel to Sydney is the condition.
Consideration • A promises B - ‘I will pay you $1000 on your arrival in Sydney’ • B travels to Sydney because he needs money - airfare costs him $250 • No consideration • Reliance on promise and detriment • May be estoppel
Consideration • Must be given on request of promisor • Must move from the promisee • Must be sufficient • Need not be adequate • Must not be illusory • Past Consideration is No Consideration • Promise to Perform an Existing Duty is Not Consideration
Consideration • Must be given on request of promisor • Australian Woollen Mills v Commonwealth
Consideration • Must move from the promisee • Price v Easton • Contract between Def and X. Defendant promised to pay Plaintiff for work performed by X. • No consideration moved from Plaintiff as promisee • Plaintiff unable to sue • Joint Promisees • Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee • Mr and Mrs Coulls joint promisees • No consideration given by her • But consideration given on behalf of both and therefore moved from both.
Consideration • Consideration must be sufficient • Consideration need not be adequate • Threshold - must be something the law recognises as having value (sufficient) • Whether the price is fair or equivalent (adequate) is not relevant • May be ‘nominal’ - eg peppercorn rent
Consideration • Woolworths v Kelly • Justice Kirby provides three reasons for the ‘sufficiency’ rule: • The courts cannot assess the value which an individual might ascribe to something. It is a subjective assessment. • If courts were empowered to decide whether a bargain was fair, then this would make enforcement of contracts uncertain. • The rule protects economic freedom
Consideration • Chappel v Nestle • Consideration for record - 1s 6d and 3 wrappers • Are the wrappers part of the consideration? No intrinsic value. No direct benefit to Nestle • ‘It is said that when received the wrappers are of no value to Nestle. This I would have thought irrelevant. A contracting party can stipulate for what consideration he chooses. A peppercorn does not cease to be good consideration if it is established that the promisee does not like pepper and will throw away the corn.’ - Lord Somervell of Harrow
Consideration • Must not be illusory • Unfettered discretion • Placer Development v Commonwealth • Promise to pay subsidy ‘of an amount or at a rate determined by the Commonwealth from time to time • No obligation • Uncertain or unenforceable • Love and affection • White v Bluett - Promise by son not to ‘bore his father with complaints’ • Dunton - promise by wife to conduct herself with sobriety and in a respectable, orderly and virtuous manner.
Consideration • Past Consideration is No Consideration • Roscorla v Thomas • Contract for sale of horse • After purchase, plaintiff asked for a guarantee that horse was not vicious • Horse was vicious • Guarantee was not supported by consideration - price had been paid under earlier contract
Consideration Actual photo of vicious horse from Roscorla v Thomas
Consideration • Promise to pay for past services • Exception to the ‘past consideration’ rule • Lampleigh v Braithwaite • Re Casey’s Patents; Stewart v Casey • the later promise to pay is interpreted ‘either as an admission which evidences or as a positive bargain which fixes the amount of that reasonable remuneration on the faith of which the service was originally rendered.’ - Bowen LJ
Consideration • A Promise to Perform an Existing Duty is Not Good Consideration • General Rule • Part Payment of a Debt • Exceptions to the General Rule • Fresh Consideration • Compromise and Forbearance to Sue • Practical Benefit • Promises Made to Third Parties • Termination and Replacement
Consideration • A Promise to Perform an Existing Duty is Not Good Consideration - General Rule • May be a public duty or a private (eg contractual) duty • Glasbrook v Glamorgan • Provision of 70 extra police to colliery during coal miner’s strike - agreement to pay • Not within the scope of the existing duty, so there was good consideration • Promise to give evidence - promisor had been subpoenaed
Consideration • Pre-existing Contract between parties • Stilk v Myrick • Promise to pay extra wages to crew of ship after 2 shipmates deserted • Original contract included emergency situations • No consideration for promise to pay extra • Hartley v Ponsonby • Similar facts, but almost half the crew had deserted • Court found the voyage was dangerous - not covered by existing duty • There was consideration for the promise to pay extra
Consideration Ship from disputed voyage of Stilk v Myrick
Consideration • Part Payment of a Debt • Pinnel’s Case - 1602 • Part payment of a debt is not good consideration for a promise by the creditor not to sue for the balance. • Foakes v Beer - affirmed the rule • Doesn’t sit well with commercial reality • Estoppel might be relevant
Consideration • Exceptions to the General Rule • Fresh Consideration • Compromise and Forbearance to Sue • Practical Benefit • Promises Made to Third Parties • Termination and Replacement
Consideration • Fresh Consideration • Glasbrook v Glamorgan • Hartley v Ponsonby • Pinnel’s Case • Lord Blackburn ‘the gift of a horse, hawk or robe, etc might be more beneficial to the plaintiff than money’ • i.e. a change in the mode of payment or the nature of the promise may transform it into fresh consideration
Consideration • Compromise and Forbearance to Sue • An agreement in settlement of a disputed claim might include a promise to perform the obligations required under the disputed contract • Recognised as good consideration • Wigan v Edwards • Compromise must be bona fide • Claim need not be legally valid - as long as promisee genuinely believes it is valid.
Consideration • Practical Benefit • Williams v Roffey Bros • Contract to renovate 27 flats for payment of £20,000 • Plaintiff unable to finish • Def offered extra payment of £575 per flat • Plaintiff renovated 8 more flats, then abandoned work • Plaintiff sued for payment - had done less than promised under original contract • Court upheld contract • Consideration was ‘practical benefit’ to Def • Rule is in contradiction to the general rule
Consideration • Williams v Roffey Bros, Glidewell J (i) If A has entered into a contract with B to do work for, or to supply goods or services to, B in return for payment by B; and (ii) At some stage before A has completely performed his obligations under the contract B has reason to doubt whether A will, or will be able to, complete his side of the bargain; and (iii) B thereupon promises A an additional payment in return for A’s promise o perform his contractual obligations on time; and (iv) As a result of giving his promise, B obtains in practice a benefit, or obviates a disbenefit; and • B’s promise is not given as a result of economic duress or fraud on the part of A; then • The benefit to B is capable of being consideration for B’s promise, so that the promise will be legally binding
Consideration • Musumeci v Winadell, NSW Ct of Appeal • Three reasons to keep the rule 1. The rule could be exploited to allow a party to extort a promise for more money by threatening to breach their existing contract unless they are paid more. 2. The promisee (ie the party that asks for more money) suffers no legal detriment – they are just doing what they have already promised to do under the original contract. • Abandoning the doctrine of the ‘existing duty’ rule undermines the meaning of consideration. ‘if these matters are capable of being regarded as consideration the reality is that the existing duty rule no longer applies, for in every case these types of benefits will be present… Indeed, it is because contracting parties regard such matters as benefits that the argument can be made that [the] existing rule should be abolished.’
Consideration • Musumeci v Winadell, NSW Ct of Appeal • Answers to these three reasons: 1. Law of duress provides a remedy for extortion, but need to provide for lesser unfair pressure. See amendment to Glidewell’s criteria 5. • The fact that the promisee extends a concession evidences the fact that the practical benefit means more than damages would. This is sufficient to count as good consideration • The rule is able to distinguish between wholly gratuitous promises, and promises which are given because the promisor obtains this kind of practical benefit.
Consideration • Musumeci v Winadell (i) If A has entered into a contract with B to do work for, or to supply goods or services to, B in return for payment by B; and (ii) At some stage before A has completely performed his obligations under the contract B has reason to doubt whether A will, or will be able to, complete his side of the bargain; and (iii) B thereupon promises A an additional payment in return for A’s promise to perform his contractual obligations on time; and
Consideration • Musumeci v Winadell • (a)As a result of giving his promise, B obtains in practice a benefit, or obviates a disbenefit, provided that A’s performance having regard to what has been so obtained is capable of being viewed by B as worth more to B than any remedy against A (allowing for any defences or cross claims) taking into account the cost to B of any such payment or concession to obtain greater assurance of A’s performance; or (b) As a result of giving his promise A suffers in practice a detriment (or obviates a benefit), provided that A is thereby foregoing the opportunity of not performing the original contract in circumstances where such non performance, taking into account B’s likely remedy against A (and allowing for any defences or cross-claims) is being capable of being viewed by A as worth more to A than performing that contract, in the absence of B’s promised payment or concession to A; and • B’s promise is not given as a result of economic duress or fraud, or undue influence or unconscionable conduct on the part of A nor is it induced otherwise by unfair pressure on the part of A, having regard to the circumstances; then • The benefit to B is capable of being consideration for B’s promise, so that the promise will be legally binding
Consideration • Promise to a third party • Shadwell v Shadwell • Promise by plaintiff to def that plaintiff would marry his fiancee. • Already under contractual duty to fiancee • The Eurymedon • Pao On v Lau Yiu Long • ‘The promisee obtains the benefit of a direct obligation which he can enforce.’
Consideration • Termination and Replacement • General rule often arises when parties try to modify existing agreement in a way that directly benefits only one party • Parties can terminate original agreement • Enter into new contract