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CTN Cash and Carry Ltd v Gallaher Ltd

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CTN Cash and Carry Ltd v Gallaher Ltd
CourtCourt of Appeal
Citations EWCA Civ 19, 4 All ER 714
Case opinions
Steyn LJ
Keywords
Duress, commercial pressure

CTN Cash and Carry Ltd v Gallaher Ltd EWCA Civ 19 is an English contract law case relating to duress. It raised the question whether an act could be considered to be economic duress if the act would in any event be lawful.

Facts

CTN Cash and Carry Ltd had a dispute with Gallaher Ltd about whether CTN should pay for some cigarettes that were delivered to the wrong warehouse and got stolen before Gallaher Ltd could pick them up again and take them to another warehouse. Gallaher believed that CTN was liable, because the risk of any had already passed, and threatened to withdraw CTN's credit facility for future dealings. They were entitled to do this for any reason. CTN paid. Later it was determined that the risk of the lost cigarettes was not on CTN and they sued for repayment.

Judgment

Steyn LJ held that the threatened withdrawal of future credit was not duress, but he expressly refrained from saying there could never be ‘lawful act duress’ in a commercial context. He said the move would be a ‘radical one with far-reaching implications… introduce a substantial and undesirable element of uncertainty in the commercial bargaining process.’ ‘It is an unattractive result, inasmuch as the defendants are allowed to retain a sum which at the trial they became aware was not in truth due to them. But in my view the law compels the result.’

See also

Duress cases
Barton v Armstrong
Astley v Reyonds
Skeate v Beale
The Atlantic Baron QB 705
Pao On v Lau Yiu Long
Universe Tankships Inc. of Monrovia v. International Transport Workers' Federation
B&S Contracts and Design Ltd v Victor Green Publications Ltd
Crescendo Management Pty Ltd v Westpact Banking Corp
Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers' Federation
Huyton SA v Peter Cremer GmbH & Co
R v Attorney General for England and Wales
Williams v Bayley
Silsbee v Webber
Mutual Finance Ltd v John Wetton & Sons Ltd
Norreys v Zeffert
English unjust enrichment and unconscionability in English law

Notes

References

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