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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Carmarthen Developments Ltd v Pennington [2008] ScotCS CSOH_139 (24 September 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_139.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSOH_139, [2008] CSOH 139

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 139

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD HODGE

 

in the cause

 

CARMARTHEN DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

SAMUEL JAMES PENNINGTON

 

Defender:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: Sandison, Advocate; Brodies LLP

Defenders: Cowie, Advocate; Lindsays WS

 

 

24 September 2008

 

[1] This case concerns two contracts for the sale of land. Each of the contracts contained suspensive conditions. The issue in this case is whether the pursuers exercised their right to intimate that the conditions were satisfied and so made the contracts unconditional before the defender effectually resiled from the contracts. That issue in turn raises a question as to the scope of the postal acceptance rule in the law of contract and a question as to what amounts to effective service of a notice under the contracts.

 

The contracts
[2]
In October 2005 the pursuers entered into missives with the defender for the purchase of two plots of land amounting respectively to 0.355 hectares and 0.896 hectares. The plots of land formed part of the defender's land at West Reston Mains, Reston, Berwickshire. The missives in each contract comprised an offer document on behalf of the pursuers dated 18 October 2005 which contained all of the operative terms of the contract and an unqualified acceptance on behalf of the defender dated 19 October 2005. The contracts (clause 12 in each contract) contained a suspensive condition in the following terms:

"12.1 It is an essential condition of this Offer and the Missives which the Purchaser may at its sole option waive in whole or in part, that the Purchaser:

12.1.1 obtains a satisfactory report following a geotechnical survey of the Subjects;

12.1.2 obtains outline planning permission for residential development ... and

12.1.3 being satisfied with the servicing detail of the Subjects ... .

12.2 It shall be at the complete discretion of the Purchaser as to whether the matters specified in Condition 12.1 above are satisfactory."

[3] The pursuers had the unilateral right to waive the suspensive conditions or to declare them to be purified as clause 12.6 was in the following terms:

"Condition 12.1 above shall be purified or waived only by our expressly intimating the same in writing to the Seller or to the Seller's solicitors. Failing such intimations:-

....

12.6.2 as regards Condition 12.1.2 within the two years following the date of conclusion of the Missives ...; or

12.6.3 as regards Condition 12.1.3 within two years following the date of conclusion of the Missives ...;

then each of the Purchaser and the Seller shall be entitled at any time thereafter, but prior to such relevant purification or waiver, as the case may be, to resile from the Missives."

If the pursuers had wished to waive any of those conditions they required to give the defender three months' prior notice under clause 12.7 of the missives.

[4] It can be seen from those clauses that the pursuers required timeously to intimate the purification or waiver of the conditions if they were to exclude the defender's right to resile from the contracts.

[5] The contracts also contained notice provisions (clauses 26 and 24 respectively) in the following terms:

"1 Any notice to be served under the Missives must be in writing and served on the Seller or the Purchaser, as the case may be, at their address as specified in the Missives or on their respective solicitors.

2 Any such notice shall be sufficiently served if sent by recorded delivery post or delivered by hand or sent by facsimile.

3 Any notice sent by recorded delivery post shall be deemed to have been duly served upon the expiry of two working days after the date of posting and in proving service it shall be sufficient to prove that the envelope containing the notice was duly addressed to the Seller or the Purchaser or their respective solicitors as the case may be and was posted to the place to which it was so addressed. Any such notice sent by facsimile shall be deemed to be served on the day of transmission, if transmitted fully between the hours of 9am and 5pm on a working day and which failing on the next working day, and in proving service it shall be sufficient to exhibit the transmission slip and the date and time of transmission on it."

The notice provisions applied to several clauses in the contracts which required or allowed parties to communicate with each other as well as the intimation provisions in clause 12.

[6] At the end of the offer document in each of the contracts the pursuers excluded the postal acceptance rule in relation to the creation of the contract by providing:

"This Offer, unless sooner withdrawn, is open for acceptance by formal letter

to reach us not later than 5pm on 21 October 2005 failing which it will be deemed to be withdrawn."

 

The events giving rise to the dispute
[7]
After concluding the contracts the pursuers applied for and obtained planning permission for residential development on the plots of land. The defender was annoyed that the pursuers did not then make the contracts unconditional and pay him the sums due under the contracts but instead waited until the two-year long-stop date at which he would obtain a right to resile. He had understood from pre-contractual discussions with the pursuers that the deal, into which he had entered, gave him a right to payment shortly after a suitable permission was obtained and the other suspensive conditions were purified and that the pursuers would wait until the long-stop date only if those conditions had not been purified. He therefore decided that he would resile from the contracts as soon as the long-stop date arrived. He obtained legal advice from his solicitor, Mr David Soeder of Messrs Turnbull, Simson & Sturrock, Jedburgh. Mr Soeder advised him that he should wait until Saturday 20 October 2007 before intimating withdrawal and warned him that he expected that the pursuers would purify the suspensive conditions before he obtained the right to resile. The defender and Mr Soeder agreed that Mr Soeder should go into his office on the Saturday morning and fax letters resiling from the contracts. Mr Soeder drafted the letters on Friday 19 October and, as instructed, returned to his office on the morning of 20 October to send the fax message including the two letters of withdrawal from the contracts. Before doing so, Mr Soeder, in accordance with the normal practice of his firm, collected mail addressed to the firm from the sorting office of the Post Office in Jedburgh. He brought a bag containing the mail to his firm's office and deposited it there. I discuss the events of the Saturday morning in more detail in paragraphs 23 - 28 below as they were the main issue of factual dispute. For now it suffices to say that he sent the fax which he had prepared on the previous day. Because the fax was sent on a day which was not a working day, intimation of withdrawal could not take effect under the contracts (see clauses 26.3 and 24.3 respectively) until 9am on Monday 22 October 2007.

[8] While the defender was preparing to withdraw from the contracts, Dickson Minto, the pursuers' solicitors, took steps to purify the conditions and thereby prevent the defender from resiling. Mr Robert Forman, an assistant in Dickson Minto, had been instructed by the pursuers to send letters on 19 October 2007 purifying the conditions. He prepared the letters on Thursday 18 October and on the morning of 19 October arranged for a partner to sign them before giving them and a fax cover sheet to his secretary to fax and then post. As a result of an oversight the letters were not sent by fax. The envelope was franked for first class delivery and was picked up from Dickson Minto by the Royal Mail at 5.55pm. Intimation of purification therefore depended on the first class post.

[9] On the morning of Monday, 22 October 2007, Mr Soeder, as was his normal practice, travelled by car with his two daughters from his home to the centre of Jedburgh, where he picked up the firm's mail bag from the sorting office of the Post Office at about 8.50am. Normally he deposited the mail bag in the firm's office nearby before driving for about five minutes to deliver his daughters to their school on the outskirts of Jedburgh just before 9am. On this occasion, however, his eldest daughter was anxious to arrive at school slightly earlier than normal. So Mr Soeder placed the firm's mail bag in his car and drove to the school before returning to the centre of Jedburgh, parking his car and entering his firm's office at about 9.03am. After depositing the mail bag and going to his office to take off his coat, he re-sent the fax resiling from the contracts at 9.08am.

 

Parties' submissions
[10]
Mr Sandison for the pursuers submitted that they had purified the suspensive conditions in clause 12 of the two contracts before the defender's notices of withdrawal took effect at 9am on Monday 22 October 2007. He advanced three separate reasons for that contention. First, he submitted that the well- known postal acceptance rule had the effect that the pursuers' notices of purification took effect on Friday 19 October 2007 when they were posted by first class mail. Secondly, he invited the court to hold that, on balance of probabilities, the notices of purification reached Jedburgh on the Saturday morning and were within the mail bag which Mr Soeder picked up that morning. Thirdly, he submitted that, in any event, the notices were served on the defender's solicitors at the latest at 8.50am on the Monday morning when Mr Soeder picked up the Monday mail bag at the Post Office before he took his daughters to school. I consider each submission in turn.

 

The postal acceptance rule
[11]
In an elegant submission Mr Sandison argued that because the notification of purification of the suspensive conditions, by converting a contract containing unilateral obligations on the part of the seller into a bilateral or synallagmatic contract in which the purchaser also had obligations, performed a function which was substantially the same as an acceptance of an offer, the postal acceptance rule applied as a default rule. The missives, he submitted, had not contracted out of that default rule. He referred to Thomson v James (1855) 18 D 1, Jacobsen, Sons & Co v Underwood (1894) 21 R 654, United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd v Eagle Aircraft Services Ltd [1968] 1 WLR 74, McBryde on Contract (3rd ed.) paras 6.109 and 6.114 and Chitty on Contracts (29th ed.) paras 2.046 and 2.050-2.054. Mr Cowie for the defender submitted that the postal acceptance rule applied only when on an objective examination of the circumstances the court could conclude that the parties had authorised that the contract could be completed by acceptance before the offeror had been notified of that acceptance. He referred to Thomson v James (above), Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] 1 WLR 155, Mannai Investment Co Ltd v Eagle Star Life Assurance Co Ltd [1997] AC 749 and Scrabster Harbour Trust v Mowlem plc 2006 SC 469.

[12] The postal acceptance rule is an established part of the law of contract in both Scots law and English law. But it is an exception to the general rule that the acceptance of a contractual offer has no effect until it is communicated to the offeror. See McBryde, para 6.109 and Chitty, para 2.043. The postal acceptance rule has its place in both legal systems as the court in those systems ascertains objectively when parties have reached consensus in idem and thereby entered into a contract. This ascertainment occurs in the context that once the offeror has made his offer he may withdraw the offer only by communicating that withdrawal to the offeree. The offer may also fall through the lapse of a reasonable time or a time limit in the offer. Until the occurrence of one of those events the offeree may accept the offer. Where an offeror by his actions is taken to have contemplated that the offeree might use the post to send his letter of acceptance, the posting of that letter brings the contract into existence before the offeror is aware that his offer has been accepted. This is clear from the opinion of the Lord President (McNeill) in Thomson v James as at p 11 he stated:

"By putting the letter of acceptance into the post office, the offeree did just what he had been invited to do, and all that it was incumbent on him or possible for him to do by way of acceptance, by the mode of communication which he was authorised, if not invited by the offeror to adopt."

Lord Deas approached the matter similarly at p 25 in that case.

[13] Counsel were not able to point to any authority in Scots law in which the postal acceptance rule had been applied to communications other than the acceptance of a contractual offer. In England the courts have applied the rule to the exercise of an option to purchase in Bruner v Moore [1904] 1 Ch 305 and have considered the application of the rule in that context in Holwell Securities v Hughes (above). In each of those cases the seller granted a option in return for the payment of a sum of money. The option contract gave the grantee the right to require the grantor to sell if the grantee exercised the option within the stipulated period. In Bruner v Moore Farwell J held that the parties must have contemplated that the post might be used as a means of communicating the exercise of the option and that therefore the option was exercised when the grantee sent a telegram to that effect addressed to the grantor. In Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes Templeman J at first instance ([1973] 1 WLR 757) and the Court of Appeal thereafter held that the contract which provided that an option was to be exercised "by notice in writing to" the grantor within the stipulated time meant that the exercise of the option was effective only when it was communicated to the grantor.

[14] I am not persuaded that there is any rule in Scots law that the posting of a letter exercising an option falls to be treated as the acceptance of an offer. While an option contract is very similar in effect to a unilateral promise to keep an offer open for acceptance for a specified period, the exercise of an option is not the acceptance of an offer but the exercise of a contractual right conferred by the option agreement. In both Thomson v James and Jacobsen, Sons & Co v Underwood the court referred to Bell's Commentaries for a statement of the postal acceptance rule. That statement, now in McLaren's ed. I. 344, is as follows:

"It is the act of acceptance that binds the bargain, and in the common case it is not necessary that the acceptance shall have reached the person who makes the offer. An offer to sell goods is a consent provisionally to a bargain, if it shall be accepted within a certain time fixed by the offer or by the law. Until the expiration of that time, the consent to the sale is held to subsist on the part of the offerer, provided he continues alive and capable of consent at the time of acceptance. From the moment of acceptance there is between the parties in idem placitum concursus et conventio, which constitutes the contract of sale. To this, however, an exception may be made by the offerer limiting it so that the arrival of the acceptance only shall bind the bargain."

See also Dunlop v Higgins (1848) 6 Bell's App. 195 in which the House of Lords also referred to Bell's statement. It does not appear to me that the exercise of an option is the acceptance of an offer as Bell discussed it.

[15] There may be disagreement as to the correct legal characterisation of an option in Scots law, namely whether it is a unilateral promise by the grantor, a conditional contract of sale or sui generis (for the various characterisations in English law see Chitty para 3.170, fn 870). Different forms of option agreement may lend themselves more readily to one or other characterisation. Indeed, some agreements which have been described as options may amount only to an offer to sell and not constitute an option agreement (viz. Lord Ross in Stone and Another v MacDonald 1979 SLT 288, at p 291 where he discusses Hamilton v Lochrane (1899) 1 F 478). Whatever the particular characterisation, most arrangements which are described as options have certain effects. First, until the party to whom the option has been granted intimates his intention to exercise the option, he is under no obligation to purchase the option subjects. Secondly, once a contract or unilateral promise has created the option, the exercise of that option is the exercise of the right conferred by that contract or promise and not the acceptance of an offer. Thirdly, when the party in whose favour the option has been given intimates the exercise of that right he becomes bound to complete the contract by purchasing the subjects. Thus while the exercise of the option by the grantee brings into being bilateral obligations, that effect does not make the exercise of the option the acceptance of an offer. It would therefore be a significant extension of the postal acceptance rule to hold that an option was exercised on the posting of a letter rather than on the communication of the exercise of the option by the grantor's receipt of the letter.

[16] Similarly, in my opinion the postal acceptance rule is not a default rule to be applied where a party to a conditional sale agreement is required to intimate the purification or waiver of suspensive conditions within a stipulated period. The contracts in this case are in form and substance conditional contracts of sale. While one cannot exclude the possibility that parties might contract in a particular case to allow the exercise of an option or the deemed intimation of purification or waiver of a condition by one party to take effect before the other party was notified, I would expect clear evidence of such an intention in their contract.

[17] In any event, I am satisfied that the terms of the contracts in this case are eloquent that the parties did not envisage that the suspensive conditions were to be treated as purified before the defender or his solicitors had been notified. First, it is clear from the final clause in each of the offer documents which I have quoted in paragraph 6 above that the parties contracted out of the postal acceptance rule in relation to the formation of the initial contracts. That of itself makes it unlikely that the parties contemplated that a party's decisions in relation to the operation of the contracts would have legal effect without the other party being notified. Secondly, clause 12.6 (quoted in paragraph 3 above) stipulated that the pursuers had to intimate in writing the purification or waiver of the suspensive conditions. The use of the word "intimate" is in my opinion inconsistent with the mere posting of a letter of intimation being sufficient to exclude the seller's right to resile. Like the expressions "give notice" or "serve notice" it requires that the pursuers make their decision known (or capable of being known) to the defender or his solicitors by delivery of the letter or letters. Thirdly, clause 26.1 in one contract and clause 24.1 in the other (which I have quoted in paragraph 5 above) required the pursuers in this context to serve notices in writing on the seller at his address specified in the missives or on his solicitors. In this regard I find the reasoning of Templeman J and the Court of Appeal in Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes to be very persuasive. The use in this clause of the language of "notice", which involves making something known, and of "serving notice" clearly indicates that the parties envisaged that the notices had to reach the intended recipients. Serving notice without notification is a contradiction.

[18] It is true, as Mr Sandison submitted, that clauses 26.3 and 24.3 of the respective contracts deemed notices to be served in the circumstances specified in those clauses. But there was deemed service only if the notice was sent by recorded delivery post or by fax as envisaged in clauses 26.2 and 24.2, which, as Mr Sandison and Mr Cowie were agreed, were permitted and not mandatory methods of service. See Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v Smiths Foods 1995 SLT 369 and Yates Building Co Ltd v R J Pulleyn & Sons (York) Ltd (1975) 237 EG 183. In other circumstances the requirement in clauses 26.1 and 24.1 that the notice reached its recipient remained in full force. In any event the deeming provision in relation to recorded delivery post, namely that the notice was served two days after the date of posting, was inconsistent with an intention that the notice given by that method should take effect on posting.

[19] For all of these reasons I am satisfied that the postal acceptance rule has no application in the circumstances of this case.

 

What was in the Saturday morning mailbag?
[20]
The second basis on which Mr Sandison sought to establish that the pursuers had timeously purified the suspensive conditions was that Dickson Minto's letters had been collected by Mr Soeder on the morning of Saturday, 20 October 2007. Mr Cowie did not dispute that, if the letters had arrived then, the defender's attempt to resile from the contracts would fail. The issue therefore is one of fact: were the letters within the bag of mail which Mr Soeder uplifted on the Saturday morning and deposited in the boardroom of his firm's office?

[21] In support of his contention that the letters had arrived on the Saturday morning Mr Sandison founded principally on two matters. First, the parties had agreed the evidence of Mr David Bentley, an official of the Royal Mail in London, who is a statistician and is Head of Service Measurement. In his affidavit Mr Bentley explained that in the three month period which included October 2007 81.5% of first class mail sent within the United Kingdom to addresses in the TD  post code area (which includes addresses in Jedburgh) was delivered on the next working day (which includes Saturday) after being posted. He also explained however that just before the period from 8 October to 4 November 2007 the Royal Mail had been subjected to industrial action for four days. It took the Royal Mail several days to recover from delays in the delivery of mail with the result that in that period the equivalent statistic was 62.7%. He also expressed the view that a letter posted first class in Edinburgh to an address in Jedburgh was more likely to arrive on the next working day than the general figure for the United Kingdom.

[22] Secondly, Mr Sandison submitted that it would need credible and reliable evidence to displace the inference to which these statistics gave rise. He submitted that Mr Soeder's evidence was not of sufficient quality to do so. Mr Soeder accepted in his evidence in court that on 1 April 2008 he had been precognosced by Mr Stephen Goldie, a partner in Brodies LLP, in relation to this case and that the draft statement which Mr Goldie prepared was an accurate record of what he had told him. In that statement Mr Goldie recorded among other things that Mr Soeder had said that on the Saturday morning he had picked up the firm's mail from the Post Office and left the bag in his firm's office. He then recorded Mr Soeder's account of events on the Monday morning which was consistent with his evidence in court which I accept and have summarised in paragraph 9 above. But Mr Soeder also told Mr Goldie that, when he and his colleagues were opening the mail on the Monday morning, they had the two mail bags from the Saturday and the Monday collections and, importantly, that he did not know from which bag the Dickson Minto envelope had come.

[23] In his evidence in court, however, Mr Soeder stated that on the Saturday morning before sending the fax to resile from the contracts he had checked for the arrival of a fax from Dickson Minto and also had looked through the envelopes in the mail bag to see if there was a letter from Dickson Minto. He explained that he could recognise their correspondence from their address labels which displayed their distinctive logo. Observing that there was no letter and no fax, he then sent the intimation of the defender's withdrawal from the contracts. He telephoned the defender and confirmed that he had not heard from Dickson Minto and so had sent the fax as agreed.

[24] I accept Mr Soeder's evidence on this matter and on the other matters to which he spoke. He struck me as an honest and reliable witness who took care to be accurate in his testimony and who frankly accepted criticisms of his conduct. He explained that he had initially thought that the defender could not win his dispute with the pursuers as he believed the letters notifying purification of the conditions would have taken effect from the moment they were posted. That was why he had kept Dickson Minto's envelope which had contained the notices. Once there was a prospect of litigation he had explained to the defender that he could not discuss the case with him as he was likely to be a witness, but he had later learnt that the defender had taken counsel's advice which was contrary to his initial view and which had caused the defender's solicitors to inquire into the events of the Monday morning. He had then concentrated on that issue and, as he had told Mr Goldie on precognition and as he stated in his evidence in court, he had retraced his steps and timed how long he would have been in the firm's office on the Monday morning before he re-sent the fax resiling from the contracts at 9.08am. That had caused him to estimate that he entered the office at 9.03am.

[25] When Mr Goldie interviewed him on 1 April Mr Soeder had been concentrating on the events of the Monday morning and had not addressed his mind to his precise acts on the Saturday morning. His account is supported to some extent by the draft statement which dealt with events on Saturday morning very briefly. It recorded only that he had come into the office on the Saturday to deal with the defender's business, that he was in the office for about ten minutes, that he had picked up the mail bag from the Post Office and had not opened the mail and that he had phoned the defender to tell him that he had sent the faxes to Dickson Minto.

[26] By letter dated 9 April 2008 Mr Goldie sent Mr Soeder the draft statement to approve or, if thought appropriate, revise. Mr Soeder did not look at the statement in any detail and did not respond to the invitation until July 2008. In about June 2008 Mr Soeder reconsidered his evidence and remembered that he had looked through the mail bag on the Saturday morning to see if there was an envelope from Dickson Minto as well as checking the fax machine for a fax from them. He recalled that it was on looking at the envelope from Dickson Minto in June 2008 that he remembered what he had done on the Saturday. He accepted that thereafter he had delayed telling Brodies or the defender's solicitors until July. He disarmingly stated that that was because he was very embarrassed that he had failed to remember that earlier. While the cause of his more detailed consideration of what he had done on the Saturday morning was not explored in the evidence, it may be that he was prompted to attempt to recall his actions on the Saturday morning after the pursuers' counsel adjusted their pleadings in mid May 2008. In those adjustments the pursuers referred to the Royal Mail statistics and thereby suggested that the Dickson Minto letters had arrived on the Saturday.

[27] I accept Mr Soeder's explanation of the conflict between what he told Mr Goldie and what he said in his evidence. As I have said, I formed the view that he was an honest and careful witness. He had no reason to seek to mislead the court. His evidence was supported by the defender who stated that Mr Soeder had phoned him on the Saturday morning and had confirmed that he had checked for correspondence from Dickson Minto before faxing the notices resiling from the contracts. He said that he remembered that Mr Soeder had said that "he had nothing from them". At one point in his examination in chief the defender said that he remembered that Mr Soeder said that he had checked the post and that he had nothing from them. He confirmed this on cross-examination. I accept that the defender was seeking to tell the truth in his evidence. I accept that Mr Soeder told him that he had checked to see if anything had arrived from Dickson Minto before sending the faxes. I have doubt whether Mr Soeder referred specifically to the post and consider that that may have been the defender's understanding of Mr Soeder's meaning rather than Mr Soeder's actual words. I am persuaded that Mr Soeder's evidence - that what he would have said was that he had not heard from the pursuers' solicitors - is more likely to be accurate. Notwithstanding that, the defender's evidence supports Mr Soeder's evidence that he checked for communications from Dickson Minto on the Saturday morning. I accept Mr Soeder's evidence that he checked both the fax machine and also the envelopes in the mail bag.

[28] Accordingly I am satisfied that the Dickson Minto letter did not arrive in Jedburgh on the Saturday morning but was in the mail bag which Mr Soeder uplifted on the Monday morning.

 

Service of the notice on Monday morning
[29]
In contrast with the Saturday's events, there was no dispute of fact as to what occurred on the Monday morning. See paragraph 9 above. The issue is whether as a matter of law the notices purifying the suspensive conditions were served (a) when Mr Soeder uplifted the mail bag from the sorting office of Jedburgh Post Office at 8.50am, before the defender's withdrawal from the contracts could take effect at 9am, or (b) when he entered his firm's offices at about 9.03am having delivered his daughters to their school.

[30] Counsel agreed that the proper approach was to have regard to the intention of the parties shown in the notice clauses of the contracts (Clause 26.1 and 24.1 respectively) and also to sound business practice. Mr Sandison contended that service of the notices was effected once the mail bag came into the possession of Mr Soeder. Mr Cowie submitted that delivery of the mail bag into the firm's office was the moment of service in a context in which parties had envisaged postal delivery.

[31] What was required was service of the notice. What amounted to communication depends in the first place on the contract. Where, as here, the contract did not exclude ordinary postal delivery (viz. Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v Smiths Foods and Yates Building Co Ltd v R J Pulleyn & Sons (York) Ltd above) the delivery by a postman of the letters to the solicitors' office by pushing the envelope containing them through the letter box would have amounted to service of notice whether or not the lawyers promptly opened the envelope. The defender's solicitors would then have had possession of the notices. It is the task of the recipients of mail to arrange for its prompt handling and the sender of a notice cannot be prejudiced by internal delays in so doing (viz. Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] 2 AC 34, Lord Fraser of Tullybelton at 43G). Thus it appears to me that the contract envisaged that service would be effected as soon as the mail arrived in the solicitors' office. Mr Cowie's submission, by concentrating on the time Mr Soeder entered the office with the unopened mail bag, implicitly accepted this proposition.

[32] In the present case the postman did not have an opportunity to deliver the mail to the offices of the defender's solicitors because it was the practice of Mr Soeder and his colleagues to uplift the mail from the Post Office at Jedburgh. In my opinion that practice placed the defender's solicitors in a similar position before the mail bag arrived at their office to that which they would have been in had the envelope fallen through their letter box. I do not consider that the fact that the Dickson Minto envelope was in a zipped mail bag with other letters prevented Mr Soeder from taking possession of the notices when he uplifted the mail on the Monday morning. He would have known that the mail bag contained letters.

[33] In Brinkibon (above) Lord Wilberforce (at p.42C-D) spoke of resolving questions of when messages were communicated by having regard to the intention of the parties, sound business practice and in some cases by a judgment of where the risks should lie. The contracts in this case provided for service on the solicitors and parties would in all probability have expected postal service to be effected by a postman delivering the letters to the solicitors' offices. There is no suggestion that parties addressed their minds to the question of when service would be effected if a partner uplifted the firm's mail from the Post Office. I am satisfied that considerations both of sound business practice and also of the attribution of risk once the letters were in Mr Soeder's control point to service of the notices occurring when he uplifted the mail bag. It appears to me that Steuart v Ree (1885) 12 R 563 is analogous. In that case the court opined that there had been citation on a defender who had received a registered letter which an employee had uplifted at the Post Office although it had not been served, as the statute required, at his residence or place of business. Common sense points towards this answer. I recognise that different considerations might apply if at the weekend a member of staff of the defender's solicitors happened to be in the Post Office and chose to pick up a mail bag and leave it in the firm's office for consideration on the next working day, but those are not the circumstances of this case.

[34] I am therefore satisfied that the notices purifying the contracts came into the possession of the defender's solicitors in accordance with their regular practice of picking up their mail from the Post Office at about 8.50am on Monday 22 October 2007, and were thus served on them before the defender's notices resiling from the contracts were capable of taking effect.

 

Disposal
[35]
I therefore sustain the first and second pleas in law for the pursuers and repel the first plea in law for the defender. I grant decree of declarator as first concluded for and decree of implement in terms of the first part of the second conclusion.

 


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