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Certainty in English law

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Certainty in English law sets out rules for how judges will interpret, sever or put contracts, trusts and other voluntary obligations into effect.

If the terms of the contract are uncertain or incomplete, the parties cannot have reached an agreement in the eyes of the law. An agreement to agree does not constitute a contract, and an inability to agree on key issues, which may include such things as price or safety, may cause the entire contract to fail. However, a court will attempt to give effect to commercial contracts where possible, by construing a reasonable construction of the contract.

Courts may also look to external standards, which are either mentioned explicitly in the contract or implied by common practice in a certain field. In addition, the court may also imply a term; if price is excluded, the court may imply a reasonable price, with the exception of land, and second-hand goods, which are unique.

If there are uncertain or incomplete clauses in the contract, and all options in resolving its true meaning have failed, it may be possible to sever and void just those affected clauses if the contract includes a severability clause. The test of whether a clause is severable is an objective test—whether a reasonable person would see the contract standing even without the clause.

Contract law

Sources on enforceability
Balfour v Balfour 2 KB 571
Rose & Frank Co v JR Crompton & Bros Ltd UKHL 2
Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd UKHL 2
Parker v Clark 1 WLR 286
Jones v Padavatton EWCA Civ 4
Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Customs and Excise UKHL 4
Baird Textile Holdings Ltd v M&S plc EWCA Civ 274
Statute of Frauds 1677 s 4
Bills of Exchange Act 1882 s 3(1)
Law of Property Act 1925 ss 52 and 54(2)
Consumer Credit Act 1974 ss 60 and 61
Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 s 2(1)
see Certainty, social agreements and deeds.
See also: English contract law

While agreement is the basis for all contracts, not all agreements are enforceable. A preliminary question is whether the contract is reasonably certain in its essential terms, such as price, subject matter and the identity of the parties. Generally the courts endeavour to "make the agreement work", so in Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd, the House of Lords held that an option to buy softwood of "fair specification" was sufficiently certain to be enforced, when read in the context of previous agreements between the parties. However, the courts do not wish to "make contracts for people", and so in Scammell and Nephew Ltd v Ouston, a clause stipulating the price of buying a new van as "on hire purchase terms" for two years was held unenforceable because there was no objective standard by which the court could know what price was intended or what a reasonable price might be. Similarly, in Baird Textile Holdings Ltd v M&S plc the Court of Appeal held that because the price and quantity to buy would be uncertain, in part, no term could be implied for M&S to give reasonable notice before terminating its purchasing agreement. Controversially, the House of Lords extended this idea by holding an agreement to negotiate towards a future contract in good faith is insufficiently certain to be enforceable.

Trusts law

Trust certainty cases
Knight v Knight (1840) 49 ER 58
Jones v Lock (1865) 1 Ch App 25
Paul v Constance EWCA Civ 2
Sprange v Barnard (1789) 2 Bro CC 585
Boyce v Boyce (1849) 16 Sim 476
Palmer v Simmonds (1854) 2 Drew 221
Re London Wine Co (Shippers) Ltd PCC 121
Hunter v Moss EWCA Civ 11
Re Harvard Securities EWHC Comm 371
In re Roberts (1881-82) LR 19 Ch D 520
Re Gulbenkian’s Settlements UKHL 5
McPhail v Doulton UKHL 1
Re Baden’s Deed Trusts (no 2) EWCA Civ 10
Re Tuck’s Settlement Trusts EWCA Civ 11
Re Barlow’s Will Trusts 1 WLR 278
West Yorkshire MCC v District Auditor No 3 RVR 24
Certainty and English trusts law
See also: English trusts law and Three certainties

See also

Notes

  1. Fry v Barnes (1953) 2 D.L.R. 817 (B.C.S.C)
  2. Hillas and Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd (1932) 147 LT 503
  3. Whitlock v Brew (1968) 118 CLR 445
  4. Three Rivers Trading Co Ltd v Gwinear & District Farmers Ltd (1967) 111 Sol. J. 831
  5. essentialia negotii
  6. Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd UKHL 2
  7. 1 AC 251
  8. nb Sale of Goods Act 1979 s 8(2) stipulates that where a contract for goods is silent on price, a reasonable price must be paid. See also May and Butcher Ltd v R UKHL 2
  9. EWCA Civ 274
  10. Walford v Miles 2 AC 128, overturning a decision of Bingham LJ in the Court of Appeal.
English contract law
Formation
Contractual terms
Breach of contract
Setting aside a contract
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