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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Law Commission >> UNFAIR TERMS IN CONTRACTS (A Joint Consultation Paper) [2002] EWLC 166(6) (3 July 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/other/EWLC/2002/166(6).html Cite as: [2002] EWLC 166(6) |
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Part VI
Sale or supply of goods not related to business
6.2 Section 6(1) [s 20(1)] of UCTA prevents any seller or supplier under a hire-purchase agreement from excluding or restricting his obligations under the SGA 1979 section 12 (seller’s implied undertakings as to title) or SOGITA section 8.[1]
6.3 We have already said[2] that we consider that these implied obligations reflect a fundamental principle of the law of moveable property, namely, that a seller or supplier of goods should have a good title to pass to the purchaser. We do not see any case for reducing the protection offered by these sections of UCTA. A seller who is unsure whether he has title can limit his liability, provided the fact that the title may be doubtful is brought home to the buyer:
the seller can contract out of the obligation to transfer full title by stipulating for sale with a restricted title; but section 6 of [UCTA] prevents him from excluding or restricting his obligations as to title in any other way.[3]
Moreover, we are not aware of any difficulties over these provisions.
6.4 Maintaining controls over sales by consumers to businesses and other “private” contracts that fall within section 6 [s 20] may have implications for the form of the legislation we envisage. It is likely to mean that the legislation will contain a separate section on sales by consumers and a separate part dealing with “private” contracts.[4] We think the resulting complexity is justified by the importance of these controls.
6.6 Section 6(3) [s 20(2)] prevents any seller from excluding or restricting liability for breach of the obligations arising under the SGA or (for hire-purchase) SOGITA as to correspondence with description or sample.[5]
6.7 It may seem odd that these controls should apply to “private sellers”. We have been unable to discover why it was thought that they should. Section 6 [s 20] is derived from SOGITA, which was passed following the Law Commissions’ First Report on Exemption Clauses. Part V of the Report suggested two formulations for legislation to control contracting out of the conditions and warranties implied by sections 13–15 of the SGA. Alternative A would have prohibited exclusion of sections 13–15 in consumer sales only; alternative B would also have prohibited unreasonable exclusion of these sections in other contracts of sale. It is pointed out that alternative B allows for a simpler definition of “consumer sale”,[6] but there is no mention of “private” contracts, nor of sales by consumers. Alternative B was preferred by the legislature, and discussion of the resulting Supply of Goods (Implied Terms) Bill in Parliament does not clarify the issue. By the time of the Second Report, the Law Commissions seem to have come to the conclusion that it was only in consumer contracts and business-to-business contracts that controls were needed over other types of contract[7] and other types of exemption clause. No recommendations were made as to the existing provisions that became UCTA section 6 [s 20].[8]
6.9 However, to keep them in their present form might cause an inconsistency in the new legislation if, as we have provisionally proposed, the controls over such clauses in business-to-business contracts were to be somewhat more limited than at present. It will be recalled that the controls in UCTA section 6 apply whether or not the clause was “negotiated” between the parties. We have provisionally proposed that in business-to-business contracts the controls over negotiated exclusion clauses in UCTA section 6(3) [s 20(2)(ii)] are not needed and that it would suffice for “standard” or “non-negotiated” terms to be subject to the general fairness test.[9] It would be rather paradoxical to provide that, as between one business and another, a negotiated clause is exempt from control but to provide control over even a negotiated clause that is used by a consumer against a business.
6.11 Our provisional view is that the third solution is probably the best one.
[1] Section 7, which does the equivalent for other consumer or business-to-business contracts under which possession or ownership of goods passes, does not apply to liability or obligations that do not arise in the course of a business. The same is true of the Scottish equivalent, s 21(3), save that s 21(3A) applies to any kind of contract. This subsection prevents the exclusion or restriction of liability as to title etc that arises under the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982, s 11B. This difference has not been reproduced in the draft Bill.
[2] Para 5.13 above. As the Law Commissions said in the First Report, para 17, there is “no justification for excluding or varying the implied condition and warranties imposed by section 12, save where it is clear that the seller is purporting to sell only a limited title.”
[3] Implied Terms in Contracts for the Supply of Goods (1979) Law Com No 95 (“the 1979 Report”) para 70 (emphasis in original).
[4] See para 8.16 below.
[5] Section 6(3) [s 20(2)] refers also to implied terms as to quality or fitness for purpose, but these do not arise in sales not made in the course of a business.
[6] See First Report, para 95.
[7] See Second Report, para 9.
[8] In the 1979 Report, the Law Commission took the view that exclusion of private contracts from UCTA s 7 stemmed from its decision to make no recommendation in the Second Report for controlling exemption clauses in anything other than business contracts.
[9] Para 5.47 above.