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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Get Nominees Limited v Trinity Welsh Homes Limited [2014] EWHC 4737 (Ch) (09 September 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/4737.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4737 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Civil Justice Centre, The Priory Courts, 33 Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
BETWEEN:
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GET NOMINEES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TRINITY WELSH HOMES LIMITED |
Defendants |
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165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4046 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR M ROBERTS (instructed by Pritchard Jones Lane) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
THE JUDGE:
"2.1 If an event of default shall occur either the seller or the buyer shall have the right to rescind this agreement by notice in writing given within 14 (fourteen) days of the event of default to the other party (as the case may be) whereupon this agreement shall immediately determine but without prejudice to the accrued rights and liabilities of any party against the other parties and the parties shall not be entitled to be paid any costs or compensation whatsoever."
"If either party exercises his right to rescind under paragraph 2.1 the seller will be entitled to retain the deposit and all accrued interest..."
"4.1 Completion of the sale and purchase of the property and payment of the balance of the purchase price in the sum of £613,500 by the buyer to the seller shall take place on the completion date as defined in this schedule being the date 14 days after whichever is the earlier of the operative date and the termination date on or before 2.00 pm at the offices of the seller's solicitors or where they may reasonably direct."
That 14 days also ran, in the events which happened, from 21 June. Accordingly, there was a 14-day period, at the end of which completion was to take place, but during which either party had the right to rescind.
"As the termination date defined in the contract was 21 June 2013, and as neither party has rescinded the contract, completion should now take place immediately. Please confirm that you are in a position to complete.
We enclose the engrossment of the transfer in duplicate in order that we may retain the duplicate executed by your client on completion."
"Please accept this letter as notice to rescind the agreement on behalf of Trinity Welsh Homes Limited. Your client may retain the deposit and any accrued interest.
Your client is well aware of the difficulties by our client in complying with the planning permission condition of the contract.
In the contract dated 22 June 2010 time has not been made of the essence to rescind the agreement and it has not been made of the essence since. Our client is therefore perfectly entitled to rescind the agreement at this stage, despite the fact that the purported completion date has passed."
"Thank you for your letter of 11 July. Although time is not of the essence of the contract in respect of the contractual completion date, we do not agree that time is not of the essence in connection with the specific provisions as to rescission. Accordingly, we do not accept your notice to rescind the contract.
Our client is ready, willing and able to complete and we hold a transfer executed on behalf of our client company. Accordingly we enclose a completion notice together with a duplicate which kindly receipt and return."
"Again I will refrain from repeating the more elaborate juristic analysis of the distinction between the two types of contract that I attempted in the United Dominions Trust case [1968] 1 WLR 74, pp 83-4. A morepractical business explanation why stipulations as to the time by which an option to acquire an interest in property should be exercised by the grantee must be punctually observed is that the grantor, so long as the option remains open, thereby submits to being disabled from disposing of his proprietary interest to anyone other than the grantee, and this without any guarantee that it will be disposed of to the grantee. In accepting such a fetter upon his powers of disposition of his property, the grantor needs to know with certainty the moment when it has come to an end."
"Time is of the essence where a contract is unilateral, such as an option under which it rests with one party to take action by a certain date if the other party is to be placed under an obligation."
"Under contracts which are only unilateral one party (the promisor) undertakes to do or refrain from doing something on his part which any party (the promise) does or refrains from doing something, but the promisee does not himself undertake to do or to refrain from doing that thing. The commonest contracts of this kind are options granted for good consideration to buy or to sell land or other property or to grant or to take a lease, competition for prizes, and the like."
He then goes on to consider the theoretical and practical reasons for this rule.
"The purpose of serving such a notice is to give the recipient fair opportunity to put right any problem which stands in the way of completion. If it were possible for the right of rescission under Standard Condition 8.3.3 to have extended application in the period after the contractual completion date has arrived, allowing a notice of rescission to be served without warning at any stage, it would undermine the general scheme of the Standard Conditions under which reasonable notice is ordinarily required before rescission is possible. This cannot have been the intention of the drafters of the Standard Conditions."
"It is significant that the provision creates an option for either party to rescind at that stage, which is to say that it allows for each of them to re-assess in the light of the up-to-date information available at that point the extent of the risks which he will assume if he proceeds with the agreement, and to choose to unwind it if he then decides he does not wish to accept the obligations which the agreement will impose upon him moving forward into the future. I consider that it is clear that neither the drafters of the Standard Conditions nor the parties intended that the effect of a right to rescind arising under standard condition 8.3.3 shortly before the contractual completion date should continue indefinitely thereafter so as to afford each party the potential ability to bring the agreement to an end without any warning at all (no matter how much time, effort and expense the other may have put into working for the proper completion of the agreement after the contractual completion date has passed, and no matter how close they may be to being able to achieve completion). If the right of rescission under standard condition 8.3.3 is not exercised promptly - by which I mean by the contractual completion date (which was found to be acceptable in Aubergine Enterprises) or perhaps a matter of a day or two thereafter - both parties must be taken to have decided that they wish to proceed with the original allocation of risk set out in their agreement."
"The contractual right of rescission under the standard condition must be exercised promptly, which means by the contractual completion date or, possibly, within a day or two thereafter."