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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd [1963] UKHL 4 (28 May 1963) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1963/4.html Cite as: [1963] 1 Lloyd's Rep 485, [1963] 3 WLR 101, [1963] 2 All ER 575, [1964] AC 465, [1963] UKHL 4 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/ 1107
HOUSE OF LORDS
HEDLEY BYRNE & COMPANY LIMITED
v.
HELLER & PARTNERS LIMITED
28th May, 1963.
Lord Reid
Lord
Reid
Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest
Lord Hodson
Lord
Devlin
Lord Pearce
my lords,
This case
raises the important question whether and in what circumstances
a
person can recover damages for loss suffered by reason of his
having
relied on an innocent but negligent misrepresentation. I
cannot do better
than adopt the following statement of the case
from the judgment of
McNair, J. :
"
This case raised certain interesting questions of law as to the
liability
" of bankers giving references as to the
credit-worthiness of their
" customers. The plaintiffs are a
firm of advertising agents. The
" defendants are merchant
bankers. In outline, the plaintiffs' case
" against the
defendants is that, having placed on behalf of a client,
"
Easipower Limited, on credit terms substantial orders for
advertising
" time on television programmes and for
advertising space in certain
" newspapers on terms under
which they, the plaintiffs, became per-
" sonally liable to
the television and newspaper companies, they
" caused
inquiries to be made through their own bank of the defendants
"
as to the credit-worthiness of Easipower Limited who were customers
of
" the defendants and were given by the defendants
satisfactory
" references. These references turned out not to
be justified, and the
" plaintiffs claim that in reliance on
the references, which they had
" no reason to question, they
refrained from cancelling the orders so
" as to relieve
themselves of their current liabilities."
The
Appellants, becoming doubtful about the financial position of
Easi-
power, got their bank to communicate with the Respondents
who were
Easipower's bankers. This was done by telephone and the
following is
a contemporaneous note of the conversation which both
parties agree is
accurate: —
"
Heller & Partners, Ltd. Minute of telephone conversation. Call
"
from National Provincial Bank Ltd., 15 Bishopsgate, E.C.2. 18.8.58.
"
Person called: L. Heller, re Easipower, Ltd. They wanted to know
"
in confidence, and without responsibility on our part, the respect-
"
ability and standing of Easipower, Ltd., and whether they would be
"
good for an advertising contract for £8,000 to £9,000. I
replied, the
" company recently opened an account with us.
Believed to be
" respectably constituted and considered good
for its normal business
" engagements. The company is a
subsidiary of Pena Industries, Ltd.,
" which is in
liquidation, but we understand that the managing director,
"
Mr. Williams, is endeavouring to buy the shares of Easipower, Ltd.,
"
from the liquidator. We believe that the company would not under-
"
take any commitments they are unable to fulfil."
Some
months later the Appellants sought a further reference, and on
7th
November, 1958, the city office of the National Provincial
Bank Limited
wrote to the Respondents in the following terms: —
"
Dear Sir, We shall be obliged by your opinion in confidence as
"
to the respectability and standing of Easipower Ltd., 27, Albemarle
"
Street, London, W.1, and by stating whether you consider them
"
trustworthy, in the way of business, to the extent of £100,000
per
" annum advertising contract. Yours faithfully,"
2
On 11th November, 1958, the Respondents replied as follows: —
" CONFIDENTIAL
" For your private use and without responsibility on the part of this
" Bank or its officials.
"
Dear Sir, In reply to your enquiry letter of 7th instant we beg to
"
advise:--Re. E………….. Ltd. Respectably
constituted Company,
" considered good for its ordinary
business engagements. Your figures
" are larger than we are
accustomed to see. Yours faithfully, Per pro
" Heller &
Partners Limited."
The
National Provincial Bank communicated these replies to
their
customers the Appellants, and it is not suggested that this
was improper
or not warranted by modern custom. The Appellants
relied on these
statements and as a result they lost over £17,000
when Easipower went into
liquidation.
The
Appellants now seek to recover this loss from the Respondents
as
damages on the ground that these replies were given negligently
and in
breach of the Respondents' duty to exercise care in giving
them. In his
judgment McNair, J. said:
" On
the assumption stated above as to the existence of the duty,
"
I have no hesitation in holding (1) that Mr. Heller was guilty of
"
negligence in giving such a reference without making plain—as
he
" did not—that it was intended to be a very guarded
reference, and
" (2) that properly understood according to
its ordinary and natural
" meaning the reference was not
justified by facts known to Mr.
" Heller."
Before
your Lordships the Respondents were anxious to contest this
finding,
but your Lordships found it unnecessary to hear argument on
this
matter, being of opinion that the appeal must fail even if
Mr. Heller was
negligent. Accordingly I cannot and do not express
any opinion on the
question whether Mr. Heller was in fact
negligent But I should make it
plain that the Appellants'
complaint is not that Mr. Heller gave his reply
without adequate
knowledge of the position, nor that he intended to create
a false
impression, but that what he said was in fact calculated to create
a
false impression and that he ought to have realised that. And
the same
applies to the Respondents' letter of 11th November.
McNair, J.
gave judgment for the Respondents on the ground that they
owed no
duty of care to the Appellants. He said:
" I
am accordingly driven to the conclusion by authority binding
"
upon me that no such action lies in the absence of contract or
"
fiduciary relationship. On the facts before me there is clearly no
"
contract, nor can I find a fiduciary relationship. It was urged on
"
behalf of the Plaintiff that the fact that Easipower Limited were
"
heavily indebted to the Defendants and that the Defendants might
"
benefit from the advertising campaign financed by the Plaintiffs,
"
were facts from which a special duty to exercise care might be
"
inferred. In my judgment, however, these facts, though clearly
"
relevant on the question of honesty if this had been in issue, are
not
" sufficient to establish any special relationship
involving a duty of
" care even if it was open to me to
extend the sphere of special relation-
" ship beyond that of
contract and fiduciary relationship."
This
judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeal both because they
were
bound by authority and because they were not satisfied that it
would
be reasonable to impose upon a banker the obligation
suggested.
Before
coming to the main question of law, it may be well to dispose
of
an argument that there was no sufficiently close relationship
between
these parties to give rise to any duty. It is said that
the Respondents did
not know the precise purpose of the enquiries
and did not even know
whether the National Provincial Bank wanted
the information for its own
use or for the use of a customer: they
knew nothing of the Appellants.
3
I would
reject that argument. They knew that the enquiry was in
connection
with an advertising contract, and it was at least
probable that the infor-
mation was wanted by the advertising
contractors. It seems to me quite
immaterial that they did not
know who these contractors were: there is no
suggestion of any
speciality which could have influenced them in deciding
whether to
give information or in what form to give it. I shall therefore
treat
this as if it were a case where a negligent misrepresentation is
made
directly to the person seeking information, opinion or
advice, and I shall
not attempt to decide what kind or degree of
proximity is necessary before
there can be a duty owed by the
defendant to the plaintiff.
The
Appellants' first argument was based on Donoghue v. Stevenson
[1932]
A.C. 562. That is a very important decision, but I do
not think that it has
any direct bearing on this case. That
decision may encourage us to develop
existing lines of authority
but it cannot entitle us to disregard them. Apart
altogether from
authority, I would think that the law must treat negligent
words
differently from negligent acts. The law ought so far as possible
to
reflect the standards of the reasonable man, and that is what
Donoghue
v. Stevenson sets out to do. The most
obvious difference between negligent
words and negligent acts is
this. Quite careful people often express definite
opinions on
social or informal occasions even when they see that others
are
likely to be influenced by them ; and they often do that without
taking
that care which they would take if asked for their opinion
professionally
or in a business connection. The Appellant agrees
that there can be no
duty of care on such occasions, and we were
referred to American and South
African authorities where that is
recognised although their law appears to
have gone much further
than ours has yet done. But it is at least unusual
casually to put
into circulation negligently-made articles which are dan-
gerous.
A man might give a friend a negligently-prepared bottle of home-
made
wine and his friend's guests might drink it with dire results. But
it
is by no means clear that those guests would have no action against
the
negligent manufacturer.
Another
obvious difference is that a negligently-made article will only
cause
one accident and so it is not very difficult to find the necessary
degree
of proximity or neighbourhood between the negligent
manufacturer and
the person injured. But words can be broadcast
with or without the consent
or the foresight of the speaker or
writer. It would be one thing to say that
the speaker owes a duty
to a limited class, but it would be going very
far to say that he
owes a duty to every ultimate " consumer " who acts
on
those words to his detriment. It would be no use to say that a
speaker
or writer owes a duty but can disclaim responsibility if
he wants to. He,
like the manufacturer, could make it part of a
contract that he is not to be
liable for his negligence: but that
contract would not protect him in a
question with a third party,
at least if the third party was unaware of it.
So it
seems to me that there is good sense behind our present law that
in
general an innocent but negligent misrepresentation gives no cause
of
action. There must be something more than the mere
misstatement. I
therefore turn to the authorities to see what more
is required. The most
natural requirement would be that expressly
or by implication from the
circumstances the speaker or writer has
undertaken some responsibility,
and that appears to me not to
conflict with any authority which is binding
on this House. Where
there is a contract there is no difficulty as regards
the
contracting parties: the question is whether there is a warranty.
The
refusal of English law to recognise any jus quaesitum
tertio causes some
difficulties, but they are not relevant
here. Then there are cases where a
person does not merely make a
statement but performs a gratuitous service.
I do not intend to
examine the cases about that, but at least they show that
in some
cases that person owes a duty of care apart from any contract,
and
to that extent they pave the way to holding that there can be a
duty
of care in making a statement of fact or opinion which is
independent of
contract.
Much of
the difficulty in this field has been caused by Derry v.
Peek,
14 App Cas 337. The action was brought against the
directors of a com-
pany in respect of false statements in a
prospectus. It was an action of
4
deceit
based on fraud and nothing else. But it was held that the
directors
had believed that their statements were true although
they had no reason-
able grounds for their belief. The Court of
Appeal held that this amounted
to fraud in law, but naturally
enough this House held that there can be no
fraud without
dishonesty and that credulity is not dishonesty. The question
was
never really considered whether the facts had imposed on the
directors
a duty to exercise care. It must be implied that on the
facts of that case
there was no such duty. But that was
immediately remedied by the Directors
Liability Act 1890 which
provided that a director is liable for untrue
statements in a
prospectus unless he proves that he had reasonable ground
to
believe and did believe that they were true.
It must
now be taken that Deny v. Peek did not establish any
universal
rule that in the absence of contract an innocent but
negligent misrepresenta-
tion cannot give rise to an action. It is
true Lord Bramwell said (at p. 347):
" To found an action for
damages there must be a contract and breach, or
" fraud."
And for the next twenty years it was generally assumed that
Derry
v. Peek decided that. But it was shown in this House in
Nocton v.
Ashburton [1914] AC 932 that that is
much too widely stated. We cannot,
therefore, now accept as
accurate the numerous statements to that effect in
cases between
1889 and 1914, and we must now determine the extent of the
exceptions
to that rule.
In Nocton
v. Ashburton a solicitor was sued for fraud. Fraud was
not
proved but he was held liable for negligence. Viscount
Haldane, L.C.
dealt with Derry v. Peek and pointed
out (at p. 947) that while the relation-
ship of the parties in
that case was not enough, the case did not decide
" that,
where a different sort of relationship ought to be inferred from
the
" circumstances, the case is to be concluded by asking
whether an action
" for deceit will lie ... There are other
obligations besides that of honesty
" the breach of which may
give a right to damages. These obligations
" depend on
principles which the judges have worked out in the fashion
"
that is characteristic of a system where much of the law has always
been
" judge-made and unwritten." It hardly needed
Donoghue v. Stevenson
to show that that process can still
operate. Then (at p. 950) Lord Haldane
quoted a passage from the
speech of Lord Herschell in Derry v. Peek
where he excluded
from the principle of that case " those cases where a
"
person within whose special province it lay to know a particular
fact
" has given an erroneous answer to an inquiry made with
regard to it by
" a person desirous of ascertaining the fact
for the purpose of determining
" his course ". Then (at
p. 954) he explained the expression " constructive
"
fraud " and said: " What it really means in this connection
is, not moral
" fraud in the ordinary sense, but breach of
the sort of obligation which is
" enforced by a court which
from the beginning regarded itself as a court
" of conscience
". He went on to refer to " breach of special duty "
and
said (at p. 955): "If such a duty can be inferred in a
particular case of a
" person issuing a prospectus, as, for
instance, in the case of directors
" issuing to the
shareholders of the company which they direct a prospectus
"
inviting the subscription by them of further capital, I do not find
in Derry
" v. Peek an authority for the
suggestion that an action for damages for
" misrepresentation
without an actual intention to deceive may not lie."
I find no
dissent from these views by the other noble and learned Lords.
Lord
Shaw also quoted the passage I have quoted from the speech of
Lord
Herschell, and, dealing with equitable relief, he approved
(at p. 971) a
passage in an argument of Sir Roundell Palmer which
concluded—" in
" order that a person may avail
himself of relief founded on it he must
" show that there was
such a proximate relation between himself and the
" person
making the representation as to bring them virtually into the
"
position of parties contracting with each other ": an
interesting anticipation
in 1871 of the test of who is my
neighbour.
Lord
Haldane gave a further statement of his view in Robinson
v.
National Bank of Scotland, 1916 SC (HL) 154, a
case to which I shall
return. Having said that in that case there
was no duty excepting the duty
of common honesty, he went on to
say:
5
" In
saying that I wish emphatically to repeat what I said in advising
"
this House in the case of Nocton v. Lord Ashburton, that
it is a
" great mistake to suppose that, because the
principle in Deny v. Peek
" clearly covers all
cases of the class to which I have referred, therefore
" the
freedom of action of the courts in recognising special duties
"
arising out of other kinds of relationship which they find
established
" by the evidence is in any way affected. I
think, as I said in Nocton's
" case, that an
exaggerated view was taken by a good many people
" of the
scope of the decision in Derry v. Peek. The whole of
the
" doctrine as to fiduciary relationships, as to the duty
of care arising
" from implied as well as express contracts,
as to the duty of care
" arising from other special
relationships which the courts may find to
" exist in
particular cases, still remains, and I should be very sorry
"
if any word fell from me which should suggest that the courts are
"
in any way hampered in recognising that the duty of care may be
"
established when such cases really occur."
This
passage makes it clear that Lord Haldane did not think that a
duty
to take care must be limited to cases of fiduciary relationship in
the
narrow sense of relationships which had been recognised by the
Court of
Chancery as being of a fiduciary character. He speaks of
other special
relationships, and I can see no logical stopping
place short of all those
relationships where it is plain that the
party seeking information or advice
was trusting the other to
exercise such a degree of care as the circumstances
required,
where it was reasonable for him to do that, and where the other
gave
the information or advice when he knew or ought to have known
that
the enquirer was relying on him. I say " ought to have
known " because
in questions of negligence we now apply the
objective standard of what
the reasonable man would have done.
A
reasonable man, knowing that he was being trusted or that his
skill
and judgment were being relied on, would, I think, have
three courses open
to him. He could keep silent or decline to give
the information or advice
sought: or he could give an answer with
a clear qualification that he
accepted no responsibility for it or
that it was given without that reflection
or enquiry which a
careful answer would require: or he could simply
answer without
any such qualification. If he chooses to adopt the last
course he
must, I think, be held to have accepted some responsibility for
his
answer being given carefully, or to have accepted a relationship
with
the enquirer which requires him to exercise such care as the
circumstances
require.
If that is
right, then it must follow that Candler v. Crane, Christmas
& Co.
[1951] 2 K.B. 164 was wrongly decided. There the
plaintiff wanted to see
the accounts of a company before deciding
to invest in it. The defendants
were the company's accountants,
and they were told by the company to
complete the company's
accounts as soon as possible because they were to
be shown to the
plaintiff who was a potential investor in the company.
At the
company's request the defendants showed the completed accounts
to
the plaintiff, discussed them with him, and allowed him to take a
copy.
The accounts had been carelessly prepared and gave a wholly
misleading
picture. It was obvious to the defendants that the
plaintiff was relying
on their skill and judgment and on their
having exercised that care which
by contract they owed to the
company, and I think that any reasonable
man in the plaintiff's
shoes would have relied on that. This seems to me
to be a typical
case of agreeing to assume a responsibility: they knew
why the
plaintiff wanted to see the accounts and why their employers,
the
company, wanted them to be shown to him, and agreed to show
them to
lim without even a suggestion that he should not rely on
them.
The
majority of the Court of Appeal held that they were bound by
Le
Lievre v. Gould [1893] 1 QB 491, and that Donoghue v.
Stevenson had
no application. In so holding I think that
they were right. The Court
of Appeal have bound themselves to
follow all rationes decidendi of
previous Court of Appeal
decisions, and, in face of that rule, it would have
been very
difficult to say that the ratio in Le Lievre v. Gould
did not cover
6
Candler's
case. Lord Denning, who dissented, distinguished Le Lievre
v.
Gould on its facts, but, as I understand the rule
which the Court of
Appeal have adopted, that is not sufficient if
the ratio applies; and this is
not an appropriate occasion
to consider whether the Court of Appeal's
rule is a good one. So
the question which we now have to consider is
whether the ratio
in Le Lievre v. Gould can be supported. But before
leaving
Candler's case I must note that Cohen, L.J. (as he then
was)
attached considerable importance to a New York decision,
Ultramares
Corporation v. Touche (1931) 255 N.Y.
170, a decision of Cardozo, CJ.
But I think that another decision
of that great judge, Glanzer v. Shepherd
233 N.Y.
236, is more in point because in the latter case there was a
direct
relationship between the weigher who gave a certificate and
the pur-
chaser of the goods weighed, who the weigher knew was
relying on his
certificate: there the weigher was held to owe a
duty to the purchaser
with whom he had no contract. The Ultramares
case can be regarded
as nearer to Le Lievre v. Gould.
In Le
Lievre v. Gould a surveyor, Gould, gave certificates to a
builder
who employed him. The plaintiffs were mortgagees of the
builders' interest
and Gould knew nothing about them or the terms
of their mortgage; but
the builder, without Gould's authority,
chose to show them Gould's report.
I have said that I do not
intend to decide anything about the degree of
proximity necessary
to establish a relationship giving rise to a duty of
care, but it
would seem difficult to find such proximity in this case and
the
actual decision in Le Lievre v. Gould may therefore be
correct. But
the decision was not put on that ground: if it had
been Cann v. Willson,
39 Ch D 39, would not have
been overruled.
Lord
Esher, M.R. held that there was no contract between the
plaintiffs
and the defendant and that this House in Derry v.
Peek had " restated
" the old law that, in the
absence of contract, an action for negligence
" cannot be
maintained when there is no fraud " (p. 498). Bowen, L.J.
gave
a similar reason: he said: " Then Derry v. Peek
decided this further
" point—viz. that in cases
like the present (of which Derry v. Peek was
"
itself an instance) there is no duty enforceable in law to be careful
"
(p. 501); and he added that the law of England " does
not consider that
" what a man writes on paper is like a gun
or other dangerous instrument;
" and, unless he intended to
deceive, the law does not, in the absence of
" contract, hold
him responsible for drawing his certificate carelessly"
(p.
502). So both he and Lord Esher held that Cann v. Willson
was wrong
in deciding that there was a duty to take care. We
now know on
the authority of Donoghue v. Stevenson that
Bowen L.J. was wrong
in limiting duty of care to guns or other
dangerous instruments, and I
think that, for reasons which I have
already given, he was also wrong in
limiting the duty of care with
regard to statements to cases where there
is a contract. On both
points Bowen, L.J. was expressing what was then
generally believed
to be the law, but later statements in this House have
gone far to
remove those limitations. I would therefore hold that the ratio
in
Le Lievre v. Gould was wrong and that Cann v.
Willson ought not to
have been overruled.
Now I must
try to apply these principles to the present case. What
the
Appellants complain of is not negligence in the ordinary sense
of carelessness,
but rather misjudgment in that Mr. Heller, while
honestly seeking to give a
fair assessment, in fact made a
statement which gave a false and misleading
impression of his
customer's credit. It appears that bankers now commonly
give
references with regard to their customers as part of their business.
I
do not know how far their customers generally permit them to
disclose their
affairs, but even with permission it cannot always
be easy for a banker to
reconcile his duty to his customer with
his desire to give a fairly balanced
reply to an enquiry. And
enquirers can hardly expect a full and objective
statement of
opinion or accurate factual information such as skilled men
would
be expected to give in reply to other kinds of enquiry. So it seems
to
me to be unusually difficult to determine just what duty beyond
a duty to be
honest a banker would be held to have undertaken if
he gave a reply without
7
an
adequate disclaimer of responsibility or other warning. It is in
light of
such considerations that I approach an examination of the
case of Robinson
v. National Bank of Scotland.
It is not
easy to extract the facts from the report of the case in the Court
of
Session (1916 S.C. 46). Several of the witnesses were held to
be unreliable
and the principal issue in the case, fraud, is not
relevant for present purposes.
But the position appears to have
been this. Harley and two brothers Inglis
wished to raise money.
They approached an insurance company on the false
basis that
Harley was to be the borrower and the Inglis brothers were to
be
guarantors. To satisfy the company as to the financial standing
of the Inglis
brothers Harley got his London bank to write to
M'Arthur, a branch agent
of the National Bank of Scotland, and
M'Arthur on 28th July, 1910, sent a
reply which was ultimately
held to be culpably careless but not fraudulent.
Robinson, the
pursuer in the action, said that he had been approached by
Harley
to become a guarantor before the enquiry was made by Harley but
he
was disbelieved by the Lord Ordinary who held that he was not
brought
into the matter before September. This was accepted by the
majority in
•the Inner House and there is no indication that
any of their Lordships in
this House questioned the finding that
the letter of 28th July was not obtained
on behalf of Robinson.
Harley and
the brothers Inglis did not proceed with their scheme in July
but
they resumed negotiations in September. The company wanted
an
additional guarantor and Harley approached Robinson. A further
reference
was asked and obtained from M'Arthur on 1st October
about the brothers
Inglis but no point was made of this. The whole
case turned on M'Arthur's
letter of 28th July. After further
negotiation the company made a loan to
Harley with the brothers
Inglis and Robinson as guarantors. Harley and
the brothers Inglis
all became bankrupt and Robinson had to pay the company
under his
guarantee.
Robinson
sued the National Bank and M'Arthur. He alleged that
M'Arthur's
letter was fraudulent and that he had been induced by it to
guarantee
the loan. He also alleged that M'Arthur had a duty to
disclose
certain facts about the brothers Inglis which were known
to him, but this
alternative case played a very minor part in the
litigation. Long opinions
were given in the Court of Session on
the question of fraud but the alternative
case of a duty to
disclose was dealt with summarily. The Lord Justice
Clerk said (at
p. 63): " It appears to me that there was no such duty of dis-
"
closure imposed upon Mr. M'Arthur towards the pursuer as would
justify
" us in applying the principle on which Norton's
case was decided." Lord
Dundas referred (at p. 67) to
cases of liability of a solicitor to his client for
erroneous
advice and of similar liability arising from a fiduciary
relationship
and said " such decisions seem to me to have no
bearing on, or application to,
" the facts of the present
case." He also drew attention to the last sentence
of the
letter of 28th July which he said would become important if
fraud
were out of the case. That sentence is : " The above
information is to be
" considered strictly confidential, and
is given on the express understanding
" that we incur no
responsibility whatever in furnishing it." Lord Salvesen,
who
dissented, did not deal with the point: and Lord Guthrie merely
said
(at p. 85) that here there was no fiduciary relationship.
In this
House an unusual course was taken during the argument.
I quote
from the Session Cases report—1916 SC (HL) 154: "
After Counsel
" for the respondents had been heard for a
short time. Earl Loreburn informed
" him that their
Lordships, as at present advised, thought that there was no
"
special duty on M'Arthur toward the pursuer; that the respondents
were
" not liable unless M'Arthur's representations were
dishonest; and that their
" Lordships had not been satisfied
as yet that the representations were dis-
" honest . . . that
under the circumstances the House was prepared to
" dismiss
the appeal, but that they considered the pursuer had been badly
"
treated though he had not any cause of action at law, and that,
therefore,
" their Lordships were disposed to direct that
there should be no costs of the
" action on either side. Earl
Loreburn said that Mr. Blackburn might prefer
" to argue the
case further and endeavour to alter these views, but of course
30781 A4
8
" he
would run the risk of altering their Lordships' views as to the
legal
" responsibility as well as upon the subject of costs."
Mr. Blackburn then
—wisely no doubt—said no more, and
judgment was given for the bank but
with no costs here or below.
That case
is very nearly indistinguishable from the present case. Lord
Loreburn
regarded the fact that M'Arthur knew that his letter might be
used
to influence others besides the immediate enquirer as entitling
Robinson
to found on it if fraud had been proved. But it is not
clear to me that he
intended to decide that there would have been
sufficient proximity between
Robinson and M'Arthur to enable him
to maintain that there was a special
relationship involving a duty
of care if the other facts had been sufficient to
create such a
relationship. I would not regard this as a binding decision on
that
question.
With
regard to the bank's duty Lord Haldane said: " There is only
one
'' other point about which I wish to say anything, and that is
the question
" which was argued by the appellant, as to there
being a special duty of
" care under the circumstances here.
I think the case of Deny v. Peek in
" this
House has finally settled in Scotland, as well as in England and
Ireland,
" the conclusion that in a case like this no duty to
be careful is established.
" There is the general duty of
common honesty, and that duty, of course
" applies to the
circumstances of this case as it applies to all other circum-
"
stances. But when a mere inquiry is made by one banker of another,
who
" stands in no special relation to him, then, in the
absence of special circum-
" stances from which a contract to
be careful can be inferred, I think there
" is no duty
excepting the duty of common honesty to which I have
"
referred."
I think
that by " a contract to be careful " Lord Haldane must have
meant
an agreement or undertaking to be careful. This was a Scots
case and by
Scots law there can be a contract without
consideration: Lord Haldane
cannot have meant that similar cases
in Scotland and England would be
decided differently on the matter
of special relationship for that reason. I
am, I think, entitled
to note that this was an extempore judgment. So
Lord Haldane was
contrasting a " mere inquiry " with a case where there
are
special circumstances from which an undertaking to be careful can
be
inferred. In Robinson's case any such undertaking was
excluded by the
sentence in M'Arthur's letter which I have quoted
and in which he said
that the information was given " on the
express understanding that we incur
" no responsibility
whatever in furnishing it."
It appears
to me that the only possible distinction in the present case is
that
here there was no adequate disclaimer of responsibility. But here
the
Appellants' bank, who were their agents in making the enquiry,
began by
saying that " they wanted to know in confidence and
without responsibility
" on our part ", that is, on the
part of the Respondents. So I cannot see how
the Appellants can
now be entitled to disregard that and maintain that the
Respondents
did incur a responsibility to them.
The
Appellants founded on a number of cases in contract where very
clear
words were required to exclude the duty of care which would
otherwise
have flowed from the contract. To that argument there
are, I think, two
answers. In the case of a contract it is
necessary to exclude liability for
negligence, but in this case
the question is whether an undertaking to assume
a duty to take
care can be inferred: and that is a very different matter.
And,
secondly, even in cases of contract general words may be
sufficient if there
was no other kind of liability to be excluded
except liability for negligence:
the general rule is that a party
is not exempted from liability for negligence
" unless
adequate words are used "—per Scrutton, L.J., in Rutter
v. Palmer
[1922] 2 K.B. 87. It being admitted that there was
here a duty to give an
honest reply, I do not see what further
liability there could be to exclude
except liability for
negligence: there being no contract there was no question
of
warranty.
I am
therefore of opinion that it is clear that the Respondents never
under-
took any duty to exercise care in giving their replies. The
Appellants cannot
succeed unless there was such a duty, and
therefore in my judgment this
appeal must be dismissed.
Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest
MY LORDS,
The
important question of law which has concerned your Lordships in
this
appeal is whether in the circumstances of the case there was a duty
of
care owed by the Respondents, whom I will call " the
bank", to the
Appellants, whom I will call " Hedleys ".
In order to recover the damages
which they claim Hedleys must
establish that the bank owed them a duty,
that the bank failed to
discharge such duty, and that as a consequence
Hedleys suffered
loss.
An
allegation of fraud was originally made but was abandoned.
The
learned Judge held that the bank had been negligent but that
they owed
no duty to Hedleys to exercise care. The Court of Appeal
agreed with the
learned Judge that no such duty was owed and it
was therefore not necessary
for them to consider whether the
finding of negligence ought or ought not
be upheld. In your
Lordships' House the legal issues were debated and
again it did
not become necessary to consider whether the finding of negli-
gence
ought or ought not be upheld. It is but fair to the bank to state
that
they firmly contend that they were not in any way negligent
and that they
were prepared to make submissions by way of
challenge of the conclusions
of the learned Judge.
Hedleys
were doing business with a company called Easipower Ltd. In
August,
1958, Hedleys wanted a banker's report concerning that company
who
then had an account with the bank. [In November, 1957, Hedleys
had
received a report about the company which had been given by
another bank
though not by direct communication.] Hedleys banked
at a Piccadilly
branch of the National Provincial Bank Limited.
Hedleys asked that a
report concerning Easipower Ltd. should be
obtained. The Piccadilly
branch communicated with the City office
of their bank, the National
Provincial. The National Provincial
City office telephoned the bank on the
18th August, 1958, and it
is common ground that the representative of the
National
Provincial said that " they wanted to know in confidence "
and
" without responsibility " on the part of the bank
as to the respectability
and standing of Easipower Ltd. and
whether Easipower Ltd. " would be
" good for an
advertising contract for £8/9,000." To that oral inquiry
the
bank then gave an oral answer. In due course the answer then
given was
communicated by the Piccadilly branch of the National
Provincial to Hedleys.
It was communicated orally and a letter of
confirmation from that branch
(dated the 21st August, 1958) was
sent to Hedleys. The letter had the
headings " Confidential"
and " For your private use and without responsi-
"
bility on the part of this Bank or the Manager." The oral answer
which
the bank had given to the City office of the National
Provincial was passed
on with the prefatory words—" In
reply to your telephoned enquiry of
" 18th August, Bankers
say:—".
There was
a later enquiry. On the 4th November, 1958, in a letter to
the
Piccadilly branch of the National Provincial Hedleys wrote: "
I have been
" requested by the Directors to again ask you to
check the financial structure
" and status of Easipower
Limited ": Hedleys made some particular refer-
ences and
concluded their letter with the words: " I would be
appreciative
" if you could make your check as exhaustive as
you reasonably can." In
a letter dated the 7th November and
headed "Private and Confidential"
the City office of the
National Provincial asked the bank for their " opinion
"
in confidence as to the respectability and standing of Easipower
Ltd."
and asked the bank to state whether they considered
Easipower Ltd. " trust-
" worthy, in the way of
business, to the extent of £100,000 per annum
"
advertising contract." The bank replied in a letter dated the
11th
November and sent to the City office of the National
Provincial. The letter
had the headings "Confidential"
and "For your private use and without
" responsibility
on the part of this Bank or its officials." On the 14th
November
the Piccadilly branch of the National Provincial wrote to
Hedleys
(heading their letter " Confidential. For your
private use and without
" responsibility on the part of this
Bank or the Manager") and, with the
10
prefatory
words: " In reply to your enquiry letter of 4th November,
Bankers
" say ", passed on what the bank had stated in
their letter to the City
office of the National Provincial.
It is, I
think, a reasonable and proper inference that the bank must
have
known that the National Provincial were making their enquiry
because some
customer of theirs was or might be entering into some
advertising contract
in respect of which Easipower Ltd. might
become under a liability to such
customer to the extent of the
figures mentioned. The enquiries were from
one bank to another.
The name of the customer (Hedleys) was not men-
tioned by the
enquiring bank (National Provincial) to the answering bank
(the
bank): nor did the enquiring bank (National Provincial) give to
the
customer (Hedleys) the name of the answering bank (the bank).
These
circumstances do not seem to me to be material. The bank
must have
known that the enquiry was being made by someone who was
contemplating
doing business with Easipower Ltd. and that their
answer or the substance
of it would in fact be passed on to such
person. The conditions subject
to which the bank gave their
answers are important but the fact that the
person to whom the
answers would in all probability be passed on was
unnamed and
unknown to the bank is not important for the purposes of
a
consideration of the legal issue which now arises. It is
inherently unlikely
that the bank would have entertained a direct
application from Hedleys
asking for a report or would have
answered an enquiry made by Hedleys
themselves: even if they had
they would certainly have stipulated that their
answer was without
responsibility. The present appeal does not raise any
question as
to the circumstances under which a banker is entitled (apart
from
direct authorisation) to answer an enquiry. I leave that question
as
it was left by Atkin, L.J. in Tournier v. National
Provincial & Union Bank
of England [1924] 1 K.B. 461, when
(at p. 486) he said: " I do not desire to
" express any
final opinion on the practice of bankers to give one another
"
information as to the affairs of their respective customers, except
to say
" it appears to me that if it is justified it must be
upon the basis of an
" implied consent of the customer."
The legal
issue which arises is, therefore, whether the bank would have
been
under a liability to Hedleys if they had failed to exercise care.
This
involves the questions whether the circumstances were such
that the bank
owed a duty of care to Hedleys, or would have owed
such a duty but for
the words " Without Responsibility ",
or whether they owed such a duty
but were given a defence by the
words " Without Responsibility " which
would protect
them if they had failed to exercise due care.
My Lords,
it seems to me that if A assumes a responsibility to B to
tender
him deliberate advice there could be a liability if the advice
is
negligently given. I say " could be " because the
ordinary courtesies and
exchanges of life would become impossible
if it were sought to attach
legal obligation to every kindly and
friendly act. But the principle of the
matter would not appear to
be in doubt. If A employs B (who might
for example be a
professional man such as an accountant or a solicitor
or a doctor)
for reward to give advice and if the advice is negligently
given
there could be a liability in B to pay damages. The fact
that the advice
is given in words would not, in my view, prevent
liability from arising.
Quite apart, however, from employment or
contract there may be circum-
stances in which a duty to exercise
care will arise if a service is voluntarily
undertaken. A medical
man may unexpectedly come across an unconscious
man, who is a
complete stranger to him, and who is in urgent need of
skilled
attention: if the medical man, following the fine traditions of
his
profession, proceeds to treat the unconscious man he must
exercise reason-
able skill and care in doing so. In his speech in
Banbury v. Bank of
Montreal [1918] A.C. 626 Lord Atkinson
(at p. 689) said: "It is well
" established that if a
doctor proceeded to treat a patient gratuitously, even
" in a
case where the patient was insensible at the time and incapable of
"
employing him, the doctor would be bound to exercise all the
professional
" skill and knowledge he possessed, or professed
to possess, and would
" be guilty of gross negligence if he
omitted to do so". To a similar
11
effect
were the words of Lord Loughborough in the much earlier case
of
Shiells v. Blackburne (1789) 1 H.B1. 158 when at p. 162
he said: "If
" a man gratuitously undertakes to do a
thing to the best of his skill,
" where his situation or
profession is such as to imply skill, an omission
" of that
skill is imputable to him as gross negligence." Compare
also
Wilkinson v. Coverdale (1793) 1 Esp. 75. I can
see no difference of principle
in the case of a banker. If someone
who was not a customer of a bank
made a formal approach to the
bank with a definite request that the
bank would give him
deliberate advice as to certain financial matters of
a nature with
which the bank ordinarily dealt the bank would be under
no
obligation to accede to the request: if however they undertook,
though
gratuitously, to give deliberate advice (I exclude what I
might call casual
and perfunctory conversations) they would be
under a duty to exercise
reasonable care in giving it. They would
be liable if they were negligent
although, there being no
consideration, no enforceable contractual relation-
ship was
created.
In the
absence of any direct dealings between one person and another,
there
are many and varied situations in which a duty is owed by one
person
to another. A road user owes a duty of care towards other road
users.
They are his " neighbours ". A duty was owed by the dock
owner
in Heaven v. Pender, L.R. 11 Q.B.D. 503. Under
a contract with a ship-
owner he had put up a staging outside a
ship in his dock. The plaintiff
used the staging because he was
employed by a ship painter who had
contracted with the shipowner
to paint the outside of the ship. The
presence of the plaintiff
was for business in which the dock owner was
interested and the
plaintiff was to be considered as having been invited
by the dock
owner to use the staging. The dock owner was therefore
under an
obligation to take reasonable care that at the time when the
staging
was provided by him for immediate use it was in a fit state to
be
used. For an injury which the plaintiff suffered because the
staging had
been carelessly put up he was entitled to succeed in a
claim against the
defendant. The chemist in George v.
Skivington, L.R. 5 Ex. 1 sold
the bottle of hair wash to
the husband knowing that it was to be used
by the wife. It was
held on demurrer that the chemist owed a duty towards
the wife to
use ordinary care in compounding the hair wash. In Donoghue
v
Stevenson [19321 A.C. 562 it was held that the manufacturer of
an article
of food, medicine, or the like, is under a duty to the
ultimate consumer
to take reasonable care that the article is free
from defect likely to cause
injury to health.
My
Lords, these are but familiar and well known illustrations,
which
could be multiplied, which show that irrespective of any
contractual or
fiduciary relationship and irrespective of any
direct dealing, a duty may be
owed by one person to another. It is
said, however, that where careless
(but not fraudulent)
misstatements are in question there can be no liability
in the
maker of them unless there is either some contractual or
fiduciary
relationship with a person adversely affected by the
making of them or
unless through the making of them something is
created or circulated or some
situation is created which is
dangerous to life, limb or property. In logic
I can see no
essential reason for distinguishing injury which is caused by
a
reliance upon words from injury which is caused by a reliance
upon the
safety of the staging to a ship or by a reliance upon the
safety for use of
the contents of a bottle of hair wash or a
bottle of some consumable liquid.
It seems to me, therefore, that
if A claims that he has suffered injury or
loss as a result of
acting upon some misstatement made by B who is not
in any
contractual or fiduciary relationship with him the enquiry that
is
first raised is whether B owed any duty to A: if he did the
further enquiry
is raised as to the nature of the duty. There may
be circumstances under
which the only duty owed by B to A is the
duty of being honest: there
may be circumstances under which B
owes to A the duty not only of being
honest but also a duty of
taking reasonable care. The issue in the present
case is whether
the bank owed any duty to Hedleys and if so what the
duty was.
12
Leaving
aside cases where there is some contractual or fiduciary
relation-
ship, there may be many situations in which one person
voluntarily or
gratuitously undertakes to do something for another
person and becomes
under a duty to exercise reasonable care. I
have given illustrations. But
apart from cases where there is some
direct dealing there may be cases
where one person issues a
document which should be the result of an
exercise of the skill
and judgment required by him in his calling and where
he knows and
intends that its accuracy will be relied upon by another. In
this
connection it will be helpful to consider the case of Cann v.
Willson
L.R. 39 ChD 39. The owner of some property wished to
obtain an
advance of money on mortgage of the property and applied
to a firm of
solicitors for the purpose of their finding a
mortgagee. Being informed
by the solicitors that for the purpose
of finding a mortgagee he should
have a valuation made of the
property he consulted the defendants and
asked them to make a
valuation. They surveyed and inspected the property
and then made
a valuation which they sent to the solicitors. The solicitors
then
particularly called the defendants' attention to the purpose for
which
the valuation was wanted and to the responsibility they were
undertaking.
The defendants staled that their valuation was a
moderate one and certainly
was not made in favour of the borrower.
The valuation and representations
so made by the defendants to the
solicitors were communicated to the
plaintiff (and a co-trustee of
his) by the solicitors. The plaintiff (and his
co-trustee, who
died before the commencement of the action) then advanced
money to
the owner upon the security of a mortgage of his property.
Chitty,
J., held on the evidence (1) that the defendants were aware of
the
purpose for which the valuation was made, and (2) that the "
valuation
" was sent by the Defendants direct to the agents
of the Plaintiff for the
" purpose of inducing the Plaintiff
and his co-trustee to lay out the trust
" money on mortgage".
The owner made default in payment and the
property proved
insufficient to answer the mortgage. The plaintiff alleged
that
the value of the property was not anything like the value given
by
the defendants in their valuation. Chitty, J., held that "
the valuation as
" made was, in fact, no valuation at all."
In those circumstances the claim
made was on the basis that the
plaintiff has sustained loss through the
negligence, want of
skill, breach of duty and misrepresentation of the
defendants.
Chilly, J., held the defendants liable. His decision was
principally
based upon his finding that the defendants owed a duty of
care to
the plaintiff. It had been argued that there was also liability
in
the defendants in contract (referred to in the judgment as the
first ground)
and on the ground of fraud (referred to as the third
ground). At the end
of his judgment Chitty, J., said: "I have
entirely passed by the question
" of contract. It is
unnecessary to decide that point. I consider on these
" two
last grounds—and if I were to prefer one to the other it would
be
" the second ground—that the Defendant is liable for
the negligence." In
the course of his judgment he said: "
It is not necessary, in my opinion,
" to decide the case with
reference to the third point, but even on the third
" point I
think the Defendants are liable—and that is what may be
termed
" fraudulent misrepresentation." He then (that
is, on the 7th June, 1888) re-
ferred to the judgment in the Court
of Appeal in Peek v. Derry (37 Ch. D.
541). That
judgment was reversed in the House of Lords on the 1st July,
1889.
Chitty, J., compared the situation with that which arose in Heaven
v.
Pender (supra). He pointed out that in that case
there was " no contractual
" relation between the
Plaintiff and the dock owner, and there was no
" personal
direct invitation to the Plaintiff to come and do the work on
"
that ship, yet it was held that the dock owner had undertaken an
obliga-
" tion towards the Plaintiff, who was one of the
persons likely to come
" and do the work to the vessel, and
that he was liable to him and was
" under an obligation to
him to use due diligence in the construction of
" the
staging." Chitty, J., went on, therefore, to hold that as the
defendants
had "knowingly placed themselves" in the
position of sending their
valuation " direct to the agents of
the Plaintiff for the purpose of inducing
" the Plaintiff "
then they " in point of law incurred a duty towards him
"
to use reasonable care in the preparation of the document." He
likened
13
the case
to George v. Skivington (supra) and continued: "In
this case
" the document supplied appears to me to stand upon
a similar footing
" and not to be distinguished from that
case, as if it had been an actual
" article that had been
handed over for the particular purpose of being so
" used. I
think, therefore, that the Defendants stood with regard to the
"
Plaintiff—quite apart from any question of there being a
contract or not
" in the peculiar circumstances of this
case—in the position of being under
" an obligation or
duty towards him." My Lords, I can see no fault or
flaw in
his reasoning and I am prepared to uphold it. If it is correct,
then
it is submitted that in the present case the bank knew that
some existing
(though to them by name unknown) person was going to
place reliance upon
what they said and that accordingly they owed
a duty of care to such
person. I will examine this submission.
Before doing so I must, however,
further consider Cann v.
Willson. It was overruled by the Court of Appeal
in Le
Lievre and Dennes v. Gould [1893] 1 QB 491. The
latter
case, binding on the Court of Appeal, in turn led to the
decision in
Candler v. Crane, Christmas & Co. [1951] 2
K.B. 164. It is necessary,
therefore, to consider the reasons
which governed the Court of Appeal in
Le Lievre v. Gould
in overruling Cann v. Willson. I do not propose
to
examine the facts in Le Lievre v. Gould: nor need
I consider whether
the result would have been no different had
Cann v. Willson not been
overruled. Lord Esher, M.R.
(at p. 497) said: "But I do not hesitate
" to say that
Cann v Willson is not now law. Chitty, J., in deciding
that
" case, acted upon an erroneous proposition of law,
which has been since
" overruled by the House of Lords in
Deny v. Peek when they restated
" the old law
that, in the absence of contract, an action for negligence cannot
"
be maintained when there is no fraud." Bowen, L.J., said (at p.
499)
that he considered that Derry v. Peek had
overruled Cann v. Willson. He
considered that Heaven
v. Pender gave no support for that decision because
it
was no more than an instance of the class of cases where one
who,
having the conduct and control of premises which may injure
those whom
he knows will have a right to and will use them, owes a
duty to protect
them. He said (at p. 501): " Then Derry v.
Peek decided this further point—
" viz., that in
cases like the present (of which Derry v. Peek was
itself
" an instance) there is no duty enforceable in law to
be careful." He
followed the view expressed by Romer, J., in
Scholes v. Brook, 63 L.T.
(N.S.) 837, that the
decision of the House of Lords in Derry v. Peek
by
implication negatived the existence of any such general
rule as laid down
in Cann v. Willson. The reasoning
of A. L Smith, L.J., in overruling
Cann v. Willson was
on similar lines.
The
enquiry is thus raised as to whether it was correct to say that
Derry
v. Peek had either directly or at least by
implication overruled that part
of the reasoning in Cann v.
Willson which led Chitty, J. to say that quite
apart from
contract and quite apart from fraud there was a duty of care
owed
by the defendants to the plaintiffs. My Lords, whatever views
may
have been held at one time as to the effect of Derry v.
Peek, authoritative
guidance as to this matter was given in
your Lordships' House in 1914 in
the case of Nocton v.
Ashburton [19141 A.C. 932. In his speech in that case
Viscount
Haldane, L.C. (at p. 947) said: " My Lords, the discussion of
the
" case by the noble and learned Lords who took part in
the decision appears
" to me to exclude the hypothesis that
they considered any other question
" to be before them than
what was the necessary foundation of an ordinary
" action for
deceit. They must indeed be taken to have thought that the
"
facts proved as to the relationship of the parties in Derry v.
Peek were
" not enough to establish any special duty
arising out of that relationship
" other than the general
duty of honesty. But they do not say that where
" a different
sort of relationship ought to be inferred from the circumstances
"
the case is to be concluded by asking whether an action for deceit
will
" lie. I think that the authorities subsequent to the
decision of the House
" of Lords shew a tendency to assume
that it was intended to mean more
" than it did. In reality
the judgment covered only a part of the field in
" which
liabilities may arise. There are other obligations besides that of
14
"
honesty the breach of which may give a right to damages. These
obliga-
" tions depend on principles which the judges have
worked out in the
" fashion that is characteristic of a
system where much of the law has always
" been judge-made and
unwritten." After a review of many authorities
Lord Haldane
said (at p. 955): "But side by side with the enforcement
"
of the duty of universal obligation to be honest and the principle
which
" gave the right to rescission, the Courts, and
especially the Court of Chan-
" cery, had to deal with the
other cases to which I have referred, cases
" raising claims
of an essentially different character, which have often been
"
mistaken for actions of deceit. Such claims raise the question
whether
" the circumstances and relations of the parties are
such as to give rise to
" duties of particular obligation
which have not been fulfilled." Lord
Haldane pointed out that
from the circumstances and relations of the parties
a special duty
may arise: there may be an implied contract at law or a
fiduciary
obligation in equity. What Deny v. Peek decided was
that the
directors were under no fiduciary duty to the public to
whom they had
addressed the invitation to subscribe. (I need not
here refer to statutory
enactments since Deny v. Peek.)
In his
speech in the same case Lord Dunedin pointed out that there can
be
no negligence unless there is a duty but that a duty may arise in
many
ways. There may be duties owing to the world at large:
alterum non
laedere. There may be duties arising from
contract. There may be duties
which arise from a relationship
without the intervention of contract in the
ordinary sense of the
term, such as the duties of a trustee to his cestui que
trust
or of a guardian to his ward.
Lord Shaw
in his speech pointed out (at p. 970) that Deny v. Peek "
was
" an action wholly and solely of deceit, founded wholly
and solely on fraud,
" was treated by this House on that
footing alone and that—this being so—
" what was
decided was that fraud must ex necessitate contain the
element
" of moral delinquency. Certain expressions by
learned Lords may seem
" to have made incursions into the
region of negligence but Deny v. Peek
"as a
decision was directed to the single and specific point just set
out."
Lord Shaw (at p. 972) formulated the following
principle: " That once the
" relations of parties have
been ascertained to be those in which a duty is
" laid upon
one person of giving information or advice to another upon
"
which that other is entitled to rely as the basis of a transaction,
responsi-
" bility for error amounting to misrepresentation
in any statement made will
" attach to the adviser or
informer although the information and advice
" have been
given not fraudulently but in good faith."
Lord
Parmoor in his speech said (at p. 978) in reference to Deny v.
Peek :
" That case decides that in an action founded
on deceit, and in which deceit
" is a necessary factor,
actual dishonesty, involving mens rea, must be
"
proved. The case, in my opinion, has no bearing whatever on actions
"
founded on a breach of duty in which dishonesty is not a necessary
factor."
My Lords,
guided by the assistance given in Nocton v. Ashburton I
con-
sider that it ought not to have been held in Le Lievre
v. Gould that Cann
v. Willson was wrongly
decided. Independently of contract there may be
circumstances
where information is given or where advice is given which
establishes
a relationship which creates a duty not only to be honest but
also
to be careful.
In his
speech in Heilbut, Symons & Co. v. Buckleton [1913] AC 30 Lord
Moulton (at p. 51) said that it was of the greatest
importance to " maintain
" in its full integrity the
principle that a person is not liable in damages
" for ar:
innocent misrepresentation, no matter in what way or under what
"
form the attack is made." That principle is, however, in no way
impeached
by recognition of the fact that if a duty exists there
is a remedy for the
breach of it. As Lord Bowen said in Low v.
Bouverie [1891] 3 Ch 82:
" the doctrine that negligent
misrepresentation affords no cause of action
" is confined to
cases in which there is no duty, such as the law recognises,
"
to be careful."
The
enquiry in the present case, and in similar cases, becomes,
therefore,
an enquiry as to whether there was a relationship
between the parties which
created a duty and if so whether such
duty included a duty of care.
15
The
guidance which Lord Haldane gave in Nocton v. Ashburton
was
repeated by him in his speech in Robinson v.
National Bank of Scotland,
1916 SC (HL) 154. He clearly
pointed out that Deny v. Peek did not
affect (1) the
whole doctrine as to fiduciary relationship, (2) the duty of
care
arising from implied as well as express contracts, and (3)
the duty of care
arising from other special relationships which
the courts may find to exist
in particular cases.
My Lords,
I consider that it follows and that it should now be regarded
as
settled that if someone possessed of a special skill undertakes,
quite
irrespective of contract, to apply that skill for the
assistance of another
person who relies upon such skill, a duty of
care will arise. The fact that
the service is to be given by means
of or by the instrumentality of words
can make no difference.
Furthermore, if in a sphere in which a person
is so placed that
others could reasonably rely upon his judgment or his
skill or
upon his ability to make careful inquiry, a person takes it
upon
himself to give information or advice to, or allows his
information or advice
to be passed on to, another person who, as
he knows or should know, will
place reliance upon it, then a duty
of care will arise.
I do not
propose to examine the facts of particular situations or the facts
of
recently decided cases in the light of this analysis, but I proceed
to apply
it to the facts of the case now under review. As I have
stated, I approach
the case on the footing that the bank knew that
what they said would in
fact be passed on to some unnamed person
who was a customer of the
National Provincial Bank. The fact that
it was said that " they ", that is,
the National
Provincial Bank, " wanted to know " does not prevent
this
conclusion. In these circumstances I think some duty towards
the unnamed
person, whoever it was, was owed by the bank. There
was a duty of honesty.
The great question, however, is whether
there was a duty of care. The
bank need not have answered the
enquiry from the National Provincial
Bank. It appears, however,
that it is a matter of banking convenience
or courtesy and
presumably of mutual business advantage that enquiries
as between
banks will be answered. The fact that it is most unlikely that
the
bank would have answered a direct enquiry from Hedleys does
not
affect the question as to what the bank must have known as to
the use that
would be made of any answer that they gave but it
cannot be left out
of account in considering what it was that the
bank undertook to do. It
does not seem to me that they undertook
before answering an enquiry to
expend time or trouble " in
searching records, studying documents, weighing
" and
comparing the favourable and unfavourable features and producing
"
a well-balanced and well-worded report." (I quote the words of
Pearson,
L.J.). Nor does it seem to me that the enquiring bank
(nor therefore
their customer) would expect such a process. This
was, I think, what was
denoted by Lord Haldane in his speech in
Robinson v. National Bank of
Scotland when he spoke
of a " mere inquiry " being made by one banker
of
another. In Parsons v. Barclay & Co. Ltd. [1910] 26 T.L.R.
628, 103 L.T.
196 C.A., Cozens-Hardy, M.R. expressed the view that
it was no part of a
banker's duty, when asked for a reference, to
make inquiries outside as to
the solvency or otherwise of the
person asked about or to do more than
answer the question put to
him honestly from what he knew from the books
and accounts before
him. There was in the present case no contemplation
of receiving
anything like a formal and detailed report such as might be
given
by some concern charged with the duty (probably for reward) of
making
all proper and relevant enquiries concerning the nature, scope
and
extent of a company's activities and of obtaining and
marshalling all avail-
able evidence as to its credit, efficiency,
standing and business reputation.
There is much to be said,
therefore, for the view that if a banker gives a
reference in the
form of a brief expression of opinion in regard to credit-
worthiness
he does not accept, and there is not expected from him, any
higher
duty than that of giving an honest answer. I need not, however,
seek
to deal further with this aspect of the matter, which perhaps
cannot be
covered by any statement of general application, because
in my judgment the
bank in the present case, by the words which
they employed, effectively
disclaimed any assumption of a duty of
care. They stated that they only
16
responded
to the inquiry on the basis that their reply was without
responsi-
bility. If the enquirers chose to receive and act upon
the reply they cannot
disregard the definite terms upon which it
was given. They cannot accept
a reply given with a stipulation and
then reject the stipulation. Further-
more, within accepted
principles (as illustrated in Rutter v. Palmer [1922]
2
K.B. 87) the words employed were apt to exclude any liability
for
negligence.
I would therefore dismiss the appeal.
Lord Hodson
MY LORDS,
The
Appellants, who are advertising agents, claim damages for loss
which
they allege they have suffered through the negligence of the
Respondents,
who are merchant bankers.
The
negligence attributed to the Respondents consists of their failure
to
act with reasonable skill and care in giving references as to
the credit-
worthiness of a company called Easipower Limited which
went into liquida-
tion after the references had been given so
that the Appellants were unable
to recover the bulk of the costs
of advertising orders which Easipower
Limited had placed with
them.
The
learned Judge at the trial found that the Respondent bankers had
been
negligent in the advice which they gave in the form of
bankers
references, the Appellants being a company which acted in
reliance on the
references and suffered financial loss accordingly
but that he must enter
judgment for the Respondents since there
was no duty imposed by law to
exercise care in giving these
references, the duty being only to act honestly
in so doing.
The
Respondents have at all times maintained that they were in no
sense
negligent and further that no damage flowed from the giving
of references
but first they took the point that whether or no
they were careless and
whether or no the Appellants suffered
damage as a result of their carelessness
they must succeed on the
footing that no duty was owed by them. This
point has been taken
throughout as being, if the Respondents are right,
decisive of the
whole matter. I will deal with it first although the under-
lying
question is whether the Respondent bankers who at all times
disclaimed
responsibility ever assumed any duty at all.
The
Appellants depend on the existence of a duty said to be assumed by
or
imposed on the Respondents when they gave a reference as to the
credit-
worthiness of Easipower Limited knowing that it would or
might be relied
upon by the Appellants or some other third party
in like situation.
The case
has been argued first on the footing that the duty was imposed
by
the relationship between the parties recognised by law as being a
special
relationship derived either from the notion of proximity
introduced by Lord
Esher in Heaven v. Pender, 11 Q.B. D.
503, 509, or from those cases firmly
established in our law which
show that those who hold themselves out as
possessing a special
skill are under a duty to exercise it with reasonable
care.
The
important case of Donoghue v. Stevenson [1932] AC 562
shows that
the area of negligence is extensive, for as Lord
Macmillan said at page 619:
" The grounds of action
may be as various and manifold as human errancy ;
" and the
conception of legal responsibility may develop in adaptation to
"
altering social conditions and standards. The criterion of judgment
must
" adjust and adapt itself to the changing circumstances
of life. The categories
" of negligence are never closed. . .
. Where there is room for diversity
" of view, it is in
determining what circumstances will establish such a
"
relationship between the parties as to give rise, on the one side, to
a duty
" to take care, and on the other side to a right to
have care taken."
17
In that
case the necessary relationship was held to have been
established
where the manufacturer of an article, ginger beer in a
bottle, sold it
to a distributor in circumstances which prevented
the distributor or the
ultimate purchaser or consumer from
discovering by inspection any defect.
He is under a legal duty to
the ultimate purchaser or consumer to take
reasonable care that
the article is free from injurious defect. No doubt that
was the
actual decision in that case, and indeed it was thought by
Wrottesley,
J. in Old Gates Estates, Ltd. v. Toplis &
Harding & Russell [11939] 3 All E.R.
209 that he was
precluded from awarding damages in tort for a negligent
valuation
made by a firm of valuers which knew it was to be used by
the
plaintiffs since the doctrine of Donoghue v. Stevenson was
confined to
negligence which results in danger to life, limb or
health. I do not think
that this is the true view of Donoghue
v. Stevenson, but the decision itself,
although its effect has
been extended to cases where there was no expectation
as
contrasted with opportunity of inspection, see Grant v.
Australian Knitting
Mills [1936] A.C. 85, and to
liability of repairers, see Haseldine v. C. A.
Daw and
Son, Ltd. [1941] 2 K.B. 343, has never been applied to cases
where
damages are claimed in tort for negligent statements
producing damage.
The attempt so to apply it failed as recently as
1951, when in Candler v.
Crane, Christmas & Co. [1951]
2 K.B. 164, the Court of Appeal by a
majority held that a false
statement made carelessly as contrasted with
fraudulently by one
person to another, though acted on by that other to
his detriment,
was not actionable in the absence of any contractual or
fiduciary
relationship between the parties and that this principle had in
no
way been modified by the decision in Donoghue v.
Stevenson. Cohen, L.J.
one of the majority of the Court,
referred to the language of Lord Esher,
M.R. [1893] 1 QB 491 in
Le Lievre v. Gould who, repeating the substance
of
what he had said in Heaven v. Pender [1883] 11 Q.B.
503, 509, said: " If
" one man is near to another, or is
near to the property of another, a duty
" lies upon him not
to do that which may cause a personal injury to that
" other,
or may injure his property." Asquith, L.J. the other member
of
the majority of the Court held that the " neighbour "
doctrine had not been
applied where the damage complained of was
not physical in its incidence
to either person or property. The
majority thus went no further than
Wrottesley, J. in the Old
Gate Estates case save that injury to property was
said to be
contemplated by the doctrine expounded in Donoghue v.
Stevenson.
It is desirable to consider the reasons given by the majority
for
their decision in the Candler case, for the Appellants rely
upon the dis-
senting judgment of Denning, L.J. in the same case.
The majority, as also
the learned trial Judge, held that they were
bound by the decision of the
Court of Appeal in Le Lievre v.
Gould [1893] 1 QB 491, in which the
leading judgment was
given by Lord Esher, M.R. and referred to as authori-
tative by
Lord Atkin in Donoghue v. Stevenson.
It is true
that Lord Esher refused to extend the proximity doctrine so as
to
cover the relationship between the parties in that case and the
majority in
Candler's case were unable to draw a valid
distinction between the facts of
that case and the case of Le
Lievre v. Gould. Denning, L.J., however,
accepted the
argument for the Appellant which has been repeated before
your
Lordships, that the facts in Le Lievre v. Gould were
not such as to
impose a liability, for the plaintiff mortgagees
who alleged that the owner's
surveyor owed a duty to them not only
had the opportunity but had
stipulated for inspection by their own
surveyor. The defendant's employee
who prepared the accounts in
Candler's case knew that the plaintiff was
a potential
investor in the company of which the accounts were
negligently
prepared and that the accounts were required in order
that they might be
shown to the plaintiff. In these circumstances
I agree with Denning, L.J.
that there is a valid distinction
between the two cases. In Le Lievre v.
Gould it was
held that an older case of Cann v. Wilson was
overruled. That
is a case where the facts were in pari materia
with those in Candler's case
and Chitty, J. held the
defendants liable because (1) they independently of
contract owed
a duty to the plaintiff which they failed to discharge, (2) that
they
had made reckless statements on which the plaintiff had acted This
18
case was
decided before this House in Deny v. Peek, 14 App Cas 337, over-
ruled the Court of Appeal on the second proposition,
but the first proposition
was untouched by Deny v. Peek
and in so far as it depended on the authority
of George v.
Skivington [1869] L.R. 5 Ex 1 the latter case was
expressly
affirmed in Donoghue v. Stevenson although
it had often previously been
impugned. It is true that, as
Asquith, L.J. pointed out in referring to
George v.
Skivington, the hair wash put into circulation knowing it
was
intended to be used by the purchaser's wife was a negligently
compounded
hair wash so that the case was so far on all fours with
Donoghue v. Stevenson
but the declaration also
averred that the defendant had said that the hair
wash was safe. I
cannot see that there is any valid distinction in this field
between
a negligent statement, for example, an incorrect label on a
bottle
which leads to injury and a negligent compounding of
ingredients which
leads to the same result. It may well be that at
the time when Le Lievre and
Gould was decided the decision
of this House in Deny v. Peek was thought
to go
further than it did. It certainly decided that careless statements
reck-
lessly but honestly made by directors in a prospectus issued
to the public were
not actionable on the basis of fraud, and
inferentially that such statements
would not be actionable in
negligence (which had not in fact been pleaded)
but it was pointed
out by this House in Nocton v. Ashburton [1914]
A.C.
932 that an action does lie from negligent mistatement where
the circum-
stances disclose a duty to be careful. It is necessary
in this connection to
quote the actual language of Lord Haldane at
pages 955-956:—
"
Such a special duty may arise from the circumstances and relations
"
of the parties. These may give rise to an implied contract at law
or
" to a fiduciary obligation in equity. If such a duty
can be inferred in
" a particular case of a person issuing a
prospectus, as, for instance, in
" the case of directors
issuing to the shareholders of the company which
" they
direct a prospectus inviting the subscription by them of further
"
capital, I do not find in Deny v. Peek an authority for
the suggestion
" that an action for damages for
misrepresentation without an actual
" intention to deceive
may not lie. What was decided there was that
" from the
facts proved in that case no such special duty to be careful
"
in statement could be inferred, and that mere want of care
therefore
" gave rise to no cause of action. In other
words, it was decided that
" the directors stood in no
fiduciary relation and therefore were under
" no fiduciary
duty to the public to whom they had addressed the
"
invitation to subscribe. I have only to add that the special
relation-
" ship must, whenever it is alleged, be clearly
shewn to exist."
So far I
have done no more than summarise the argument addressed to
the
Court of Appeal in Candler's case to which effect was given in
the
dissenting judgment of Denning, L.J., with which I
respectfully agree in so
far as it dealt with the facts of that
case. I am therefore of opinion that
his judgment is to be
preferred to that of the majority, although the opinion
of the
majority is undoubtedly supported by the ratio decidendi of
Le
Lievre v. Gould which they cannot be criticised
for following.
This,
however, does not carry the Appellants further than this,
that
provided they can establish a special duty they are entitled
to succeed in
an action based on breach of that duty.
I shall
later refer to certain cases which support the view that apart
from
what are usually called fiduciary relationships such as those
between trustee
and cestui que trust, solicitor and client,
parent and child or guardian and
ward, there are other
circumstances in which the law imposes a duty to be
careful, which
is not limited to a duty to be careful to avoid personal injury
or
injury to property but covers a duty to avoid inflicting pecuniary
loss
provided always that there is a sufficiently close
relationship to give rise
to a duty of care.
The Courts
of Equity recognised that a fiduciary relationship exists " in
"
almost every shape ", to quote from Field, J. in Plowright v.
Lambert,
52 L.T. 646 at page 652. He went on to refer to a
case which had said that
the relationship could be created
voluntarily, as it were, by a person coming
into a state of
confidential relationship with another by offering to give
advice
in a matter, and so being disabled thereafter from purchasing
19
It is
difficult to see why liability as such should depend on the nature
of
the damage. Lord Roche in Morrison Steamship Company, Ltd.
v.
Greystoke Castle (Cargo Owners) [1947] A.C. 265 at
page 280 instanced
damage to a lorry by the negligence of the
driver of another lorry which
while it does no damage to the goods
in the second lorry causes the goods
owner to be put to expense
which is recoverable by direct action against the
negligent
driver.
It is not
to be supposed that the majority of the Court of Appeal who
decided
as they did in Candler's case were unmindful of the decision
in
Nocton v. Ashburton to which their attention was
drawn, but they seem to
have been impressed with the view that in
the passage I have quoted Lord
Haldane had in mind only fiduciary
relationships in the strict sense, but in
my opinion the words
need not be so limited. I am fortified in this opinion
by examples
to be found in the old authorities such as Shiells and Another
v.
Blackburne, 126 E.R. 94, Wilkinson v. Coverdale, 1
Esp. 75, 170 E.R.
283, and Gladwell v. Steggal, 132
E.R. 1282, which are illustrations of cases
where the law has held
that a duty to exercise reasonable care (breach of
which is
remediable in damages) has been imposed in the absence of a
fiduciary
relationship where persons hold themselves out as possessing
special
skill and are thus under a duty to exercise it with
reasonable care. The
statement of Lord Loughborough in Shiells
and another v. Blackburne
(supra) is always accepted as
authoritative and ought not to be dismissed
as dictum, although
the plaintiff failed to establish facts which satisfied the
standard
he set. He said: " If a man gratuitously undertakes to do a
thing
" to the best of his skill, where his situation or
profession is such as to imply
" skill, an omission of that
skill is imputable to him as gross negligence."
True that
proximity is more difficult to establish where words are
concerned
than in the case of other activities and mere casual
observations are not to
be relied upon, see Fish v. Kelly,
17 C.B. (N.S.) 194, but these matters go
to difficulty of
proof rather than principle.
A modern
instance is to be found in the case of Woods v. Martins
Bank,
Ltd. and Another [1959] 1 Q.B. 55, where Salmon, J. held
that on the facts of
the case the defendant bank which had held
itself out as being advisers on
investments (which was within the
scope of their business) and had not given
the plaintiff
reasonably careful or skilful advice so that he suffered loss
were
held in breach of duty and so liable in damages even though
the plaintiff
may not have been a customer of the bank at the
material time.
True that
the learned Judge based this part of his conclusion on a
fiduciary
relationship which he held to exist between the
plaintiff and the bank and
thus brought himself within the scope
of the decision in Candler's case by
which he was bound.
For my part I should have thought that even if the
learned Judge
put a strained interpretation on the word " fiduciary "
which
is based on the idea of trust, the decision can be properly
sustained as an
example involving a special relationship.
I do not
overlook the point forcefully made by Harman, L.J. in his judg-
ment
([1961] 3 W.L.R. 1239) and elaborated by counsel for the
Respondent
before your Lordships that it may in certain cases
appear to be strange that
whereas innocent misrepresentation does
not sound in damages, yet in the
special cases under consideration
an injured party may sue in tort a third
party whose negligent
misrepresentation has induced him to enter into the
contract. As
was pointed out by Lord Wrenbury, however, in Banbury v.
The
Bank of Montreal [1918] A.C. 626 at p. 713, innocent
misrepresentation
is not the cause of action but evidence of the
negligence which is the cause
of action.
Was there,
then, a special relationship here? I cannot exclude
from
consideration the actual terms in which the reference was
given and I cannot
see how the Appellants can get over the
difficulty which these words put in
their way. They cannot say
that the Respondents are seeking, as it were,
contract out of
their duty by the use of language which is insufficient for
the
purpose if the truth of the matter is that the Respondents never
assumed
a duty of care nor was such a duty imposed upon them.
20
The first
question is whether a duty was ever imposed, and the language
used
must be considered before the question can be answered. In the
case
of a person giving a reference I see no objection in law or
morals to the
giver of the reference protecting himself by giving
it without taking responsi-
bility for anything more than the
honesty of his opinion which must involve
without taking
responsibility for negligence in giving that opinion. I cannot
accept
the contention of the Appellant that the responsibility disclaimed
was
limited to the bank to which the reference was given nor can I
agree that
it referred only to responsibility for accuracy of
detail.
Similar
words were present in the case of Robinson v. National Bank
of
Scotland, 1916, S.C. (H.L.) 154 at page 159, a case in
which the facts cannot,
I think, be distinguished in any material
respect from this. Moreover, in
the Inner House the words of
disclaimer were, I think, treated as not
without significance.
In this
House the opinion was clearly expressed that the representations
made
were careless, inaccurate and misleading but that the pursuer had
no
remedy since there was no special duty on the bank's
representative towards
the pursuer. This conclusion was reached
quite apart from the disclaimer
of responsibility contained in the
defender bank's letters.
Viscount
Haldane recalled the case of Nocton v. Ashburton in
the
following passage at page 157: —
" In
saying that I wish emphatically to repeat what I said in advising
"
this House in the case of Nocton v. Lord Ashburton that
it is a
" great mistake to suppose that, because the
principle in Deny v. Peek
" clearly covers all cases
of the class to which I have referred, therefore
" the
freedom of action of the Courts in recognising special duties
arising
" out of other kinds of relationship which they find
established by the
" evidence is in any way affected. I
think, as I said in Nocton's case,
" that an
exaggerated view was taken by a good many people of the
"
scope of the decision in Deny v. Peek. The whole of the
doctrine as
" to fiduciary relationships, as to the duty of
care arising from implied
" as well as express contracts, as
to the duty of care arising from other
" special
relationships which the Courts may find to exist in particular
"
cases, still remains, and I should be very sorry if any word fell
from
" me which should suggest that the Courts are in any way
hampered
" in recognising that the duty of care may be
established when such
" cases really occur."
This
authority is, I think, conclusive against the Appellants and is
not
effectively weakened by the fact that the case came to an end
before the
matter had been fully argued upon the House intimating
that it was prepared
to dismiss the appeal without costs on either
side since the pursuer had in
its opinion been badly treated.
Since no detailed reasons were given by the
House for the view
that a banker's reference given honestly does not in the
ordinary
course carry with it a duty to take reasonable care, that duty
being
based on a special relationship, it will not, I hope, be out
of place if I express
my concurrence with the observations of
Pearson, L.J. who delivered the
leading judgment in the Court of
Appeal and said—see [1961] 3 W.L.R. at
p. 1239:
"
Apart from authority, I am not satisfied that it would be
reasonable
" to impose upon a banker the obligation
suggested, if that obligation
" really adds anything to the
duty of giving an honest answer. It is con-
" ceded by Mr.
Cooke that the banker is not expected to make outside
"
inquiries to supplement the information which he already has. Is he
"
then expected, in business hours in the bank's time, to expend time
and
" trouble in searching records, studying documents,
weighing and com-
" paring the favourable and unfavourable
features and producing a
" well-balanced and well-worded
report? That seems wholly unreason-
" able. Then, if he is
not expected to do any of those things, and if he
" is
permitted to give an impromptu answer in the words that immedi-
"
ately come to his mind on the basis of the facts which he happens
to
" remember or is able to ascertain from a quick glance at
the file
" or one of the files, the duty of care seems to add
little, if anything,
21
" to
the duty of honesty. If the answer given is seriously wrong, that
"
is some evidence—of course, only some evidence—of this
honesty.
" Therefore, apart from authority, it is far from
clear, to my mind, that
" fore, apart from authority, it is
far from clear, to my mind, that
" the banker, hi answering
such an inquiry, could reasonably be supposed
" to be
assuming any duty higher than that of giving an honest answer."
This is to
the same effect as the opinion of Lord Cozens-Hardy, M.R. in
Parsons
v. Barclays Bank Ltd. (1910) 26 T.L.R. at page 628 cited
as
follows :—
" His
Lordship said he wished emphatically to repudiate the sug-
gestion
that, when a banker was asked for a reference of this
" kind,
it was any part of his duty to make inquiries outside as to the
"
solvency or otherwise of the person asked about, or to do anything
"
more than answer the question put to him honestly from what he
"
knew from the books and accounts before him. To hold otherwise
"
would be a very dangerous thing to do and would put an end to a
very
" wholesome and useful practice and long established
custom which was
" now largely followed by bankers."
It would,
I think, be unreasonable to impose an additional burden on
persons
such as bankers who are asked to give references and might if
more
than honesty were required be put to great trouble before all
available
material had been explored and considered.
It was
held in Low v. Bouverie [1891] 3 Ch 82 that if a trustee
takes upon
himself to answer the enquiries of a stranger about to
deal with the cestui
que trust, he is not under a legal
obligation to do more than to give honest
answers to the best of
his actual knowledge and belief, he is not bound to
make enquiries
himself.
I do not
think a banker giving references in the ordinary exercise of
business
should be in any worse position than the trustee. I have
already pointed
out that a banker, like anyone else, may find
himself involved in a special
relationship involving liability, as
in Wood v. Martins Bank Ltd. and
Another (supra) but
there are no special features here which enable the
Appellants to
succeed.
I do not
think it is possible to catalogue the special features which must
be
found to exist before the duty of care will arise in a given
case, but since
preparing this Opinion I have had the opportunity
of reading the speech
which my noble and learned friend, Lord
Morris of Borth-y-Gest, has
prepared.
I agree
with him that if in a sphere where a person is so placed that
others
could reasonably rely upon his judgment or his skill or
upon his ability to
make careful enquiry such person takes it upon
himself to give information
or advice to, or allows his
information or advice to be passed on to, another
person who, as
he knows, or shall know, will place reliance upon it, then
a duty
of care will arise.
I would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Devlin
My lords,
The bare
facts of this case, stated sufficiently to raise the general point
of
law, are these. The Appellants, being anxious to know whether
they
could safely extend credit to certain traders with whom they
were dealing,
sought a banker's reference about them. For this
purpose their bank, the
National Provincial, approached the
Respondents who are the traders' bank.
The Respondents gave,
without making any charge for it and in the usual
way, a
reference which was so carelessly phrased that it led the
Appellants
to believe the traders to be creditworthy when in fact
they were not. The
Appellants seek to recover from the Respondents
the consequent loss.
22
Mr. Foster
for the Respondents has given your Lordships three reasons
why the
Appellants should not recover. The first is founded upon a
general
statement of the law which, if true, is of immense effect.
Its hypothesis is
that there is no general duty not to make
careless statements. No one
challenges that hypothesis. There is
no duty to be careful in speech as there
is a duty to be honest in
speech. Nor indeed is there any general duty
to be careful in
action. The duty is limited to those who can establish
some
relationship of proximity such as was found to exist in Donoghue
v.
Stevenson [1932] AC 562. A plaintiff cannot,
therefore, recover for financial
loss caused by a careless
statement unless he can show that the maker of
the statement was
under a special duty to him to be careful. Mr. Foster
submits that
this special duty must be brought under one of three categories.
It
must be contractual; or it must be fiduciary; or it must arise from
the
relationship of proximity and the financial loss must flow
from physical
damage done to the person or the property of the
plaintiff. The law is now
settled, Mr. Foster submits, and these
three categories are exhaustive. It
was so decided in Candler
v. Crane, Christmas & Co. [1951] 2 K.B. 164, and
that
decision, Mr. Foster submits, is right in principle and in accordance
with
earlier authorities.
Mr.
Gardiner for the Appellants agrees that outside contractual
and
fiduciary duty there must be a relationship of proximity—that
is Donoghue
v. Stevenson—but he disputes that
recovery is then limited to loss flowing
from physical damage. He
has not been able to cite a single case in which
a defendant has
been held liable for a careless statement leading, otherwise
than
through the channel of physical damage, to financial loss. But
he
submits that in principle such loss ought to be recoverable and
that there is
no authority which prevents your Lordships from
acting upon that principle.
Unless Mr. Gardiner can persuade your
Lordships of this, his case fails
at the outset. This, therefore,
is the first and the most fundamental of the
issues which the
House is asked to decide.
Mr.
Foster's second reason is that, if it is open to your Lordships
to
declare that there are or can be special or proximate
relationships outside
the categories he has named, your Lordships
cannot formulate one to fit
the case of a banker who gives a
reference to a third party who is not his
customer; and he
contends that your Lordships have already decided that
point in
Robinson v. The National Bank of Scotland (1916)
S.C. (H.L.) 154.
His third reason is that if there can be
found in cases such as this a special
relationship between bankers
and third parties, on the facts of the present
case the Appellants
fall outside it; and here he relies particularly on the
fact that
the reference was marked " Strictly confidential and given on
the
" express understanding that we incur no responsibility
whatever in
furnishing it."
My Lords,
I approach the consideration of the first and fundamental
question
in the way in which Lord Atkin approached the same sort
of
question—that is, in essence the same sort, though in
particulars very
different—in Donoghue v. Stevenson.
If Mr. Foster's proposition is the
result of the authorities,
then, as Lord Atkin said at page 582, " I should
"
consider the result a grave defect in the law, and so contrary to
principle
" that I should hesitate long before following any
decision to that effect which
" had not the authority of this
House." So before I examine the authorities,
I shall explain
why I think that the law, if settled as Mr. Foster says it is,
would
be defective. As well as being defective in the sense that it
would
leave a man without a remedy where he ought to have one and
where it is
well within the scope of the law to give him one, it
would also be profoundly
illogical. The common law is tolerant of
much illogicality, especially on the
surface; but no system of law
can be workable if it has not got logic at the
root of it.
Originally
it was thought that the tort of negligence must be confined
entirely
to deeds and could not extend to words. That was supposed to
have
been decided by Deny v. Peek (1889) 14 App Cas 337. I
cannot
imagine that anyone would now dispute that if this were the
law, the law
would be gravely defective. The practical proof of
this is that the supposed
23
deficiency
was in relation to the facts in Deny v. Peek immediately
made good
by Act of Parliament. Today it is unthinkable that the
law could permit
directors to be as careless as they liked in the
statements they made in a
prospectus.
A simple
distinction between negligence in word and negligence in deed
might
leave the law defective but at least it would be intelligible. This
is
not however the distinction that is drawn in Mr. Foster's
argument and it
is one which would be unworkable. A defendant who
is given a car to
overhaul and repair if necessary is liable to
the injured driver (a) if he over-
hauls it and repairs it
negligently and tells the driver it is safe when it is
not; (b)
if he overhauls it and negligently finds it not to be in need of
repair
and tells the driver it is safe when it is not; and (c)
if he negligently omits
to overhaul it at all and tells the driver
that it is safe when it is not. It would
be absurd in any of these
cases to argue that the proximate cause of the
driver's injury was
not what the defendant did or failed to do but his negli-
gent
statement on the faith of which the driver drove the car and for
which
he could not recover. In this type of case, where if there
were a contract
there would undoubtedly be a duty of service, it
is not practicable to distin-
guish between the inspection or
examination, the acts done or omitted to
be done, and the advice
or information given. So neither in this case nor
in Candler v.
Crane, Christmas & Co. (Denning. L.J. noted the point
at
page 179 where he gave the example of the analyst who
negligently certifies
food to be harmless) has Mr. Foster argued
that the distinction lies there.
This is
why the distinction is now said to depend on whether financial
loss
is caused through physical injury or whether it is caused directly.
The
interposition of the physical injury is said to make a
difference of principle.
I can find neither logic nor common sense
in this. If irrespective of contract,
a doctor negligently advises
a patient that he can safely pursue his occupation
and he cannot
and the patient's health suffers and he loses his livelihood,
the
patient has a remedy. But if the doctor negligently advises him that
he
cannot safely pursue his occupation when in fact he can and he
loses his
livelihood, there is said to be no remedy. Unless, of
course, the patient was
a private patient and the doctor accepted
half a guinea for his trouble:
then the patient can recover all. I
am bound to say, my Lords, that I think
this to be nonsense. It is
not the sort of nonsense that can arise even in
the best system of
law out of the need to draw nice distinctions between
borderline
cases. It arises, if it is the law, simply out of a refusal to
make
sense. The line is not drawn on any intelligible principle.
It just happens
to be the line which those who have been driven
from the extreme assertion
that negligent statements in the
absence of contractual or fiduciary duty give
no cause of action
have in the course of their retreat so far reached.
I shall
now examine the relevant authorities, and your Lordships will,
I
hope, pardon me if with one exception I attend only to those
that have been
decided in this House, for I have made it plain
that I will not in this matter
yield to persuasion but only to
compulsion. The exception is the case of
Le Lievre v. Gould
[1893] 1 QB 491, for your Lordships will not easily
upset
decisions of the Court of Appeal if they have stood unquestioned
for
as long as 70 years. The five relevant decisions of this House
are Deny v.
Peek, Nocton v. Ashburton [1914] AC 932, Robinson v. National Bank of
Scotland,
Donoghue v. Stevenson, and the Greystoke Castle [1947]
A.C. 265.
The last of these I can deal with at once, for it lies
outside the main stream
of authority on this point. It is a case
in which damage was done to a ship
as the result of a collision
with another ship. The owners of cargo on the
first ship, which
cargo was not itself damaged, thus became liable to the
owners of
the first ship for a general average contribution. They sued
the
second ship as being partly to blame for the collision. Thus
they were
claiming for the financial loss caused to them by having
to make the general
average contribution although their property
sustained no physical damage.
This House held that they could
recover. Their Lordships did not in that
case lay down any general
principle about liability for financial loss in
the absence of
physical damage; but the case itself makes it impossible to
argue
that there is any general rule showing that such loss is of its
nature
irrecoverable.
24
I turn
back to the earlier authorities beginning with Derry v. Peek.
The
facts in this case are so well known that I need not state
them again. Nor
need I state in my own words the effect of the
decision. That has been
done authoritatively by this House in
Nocton v. Ashburton. I quote Lord
Haldane at page
947 as stating most comprehensively the limits of the
decision,
noting that his view of the case is fully supported by Lord Shaw
at
page 970 and Lord Parmoor at page 978. " My Lords, the
discussion of
" the case by the noble and learned Lords who
took part in the decision
" appears to me to exclude the
hypothesis that they considered any other
" question to be
before them than what was the necessary foundation of an
"
ordinary action for deceit. They must indeed be taken to have thought
that
" the facts proved as to the relationship of the parties
in Derry v. Peek were
" not enough to establish
any special duty arising out of that relationship
" other
than the general duty of honesty. But they do not say that where a
"
different sort of relationship ought to be inferred from the
circumstances
" the case is to be concluded by asking whether
an action for deceit will lie."
There was
in Derry v. Peek, as the report of the case in 14 A.C.
at page 338
shows, no plea of innocent or negligent
misrepresentation and so their Lord-
ships did not make any
pronouncement on that. I am bound to say that
had there been such
a plea I am sure that the House would have rejected it.
As Lord
Haldane said, their Lordships must " be taken to have
thought"
that there was no liability in negligence. But what
your Lordships may
be taken to have thought, though it may
exercise great influence upon those
who thereafter have to form
their own opinion on the subject, is not the
law of England. It is
impossible to say how their Lordships would have
formulated the
principle if they had laid one down. They might have made
it
general or they might have confined it to the facts of the case.
They
might have made an exception of the sort indicated by Lord
Herschell at
page 360 or they might not. This is speculation. All
that is certain is that on
this point the House laid down no law
at all.
Clearly in
Le Lievre v. Gould it was thought that the House had
done
so. Esher, M.R. at page 498 treated Derry v. Peek
as restating the old law
" that, in the absence of
contract, an action for negligence cannot be main-
" tained
when there is no fraud ". A. L. Smith, L.J., stated the law in
the
same way at page 504. This is wrong and the House, in effect,
said so in
Nocton v. Ashburton.
My Lords,
I need not consider how far thereafter a court of equal authority
was
bound to follow Le Lievre v. Gould. It may be that the
decision on
the facts was correct even though the reasoning was
too wide. There has
been a difference of opinion about the effect
of the decision: compare
Asquith, L.J., in Candler v.
Crane, Christmas & Co., at page 193 with
Denning, L.J.
at page 181. Nor need I consider what part of the reasoning,
if
any, should be held to survive Nocton v. Ashburton. It
is clear that after
1914 it would be to Nocton v. Ashburton and
not to Le Lievre v. Gould that
the lawyer would look
in order to ascertain what the exceptions were to the
general
principle that a man is not liable for careless misrepresentation.
I
cannot feel, therefore, that there is any principle enunciated in Le
Lievre v.
Gould which is now so deeply embedded in the
law that your Lordships
ought not to disturb it.
I come now
to the case of Nocton v. Ashburton, which both sides
put
forward as the most important of the authorities which your
Lordships have
to consider. The Appellants say that it removed the
restrictions which
Derry v. Peek was thought to have
put upon liability for negligent mis-
representation. The
Respondents say that it removed those restrictions
only to a very
limited extent, that is to say, by adding fiduciary obligation
to
contract as a source of special duty; and that it closed the
door on any
further expansion. I propose, therefore, to examine it
with some care
because it is not at all easy to determine exactly
what it decided.
Haldane, L.C. at page 943 began his speech by
saying: " Owing to the mode
" in which this case has
been treated both by the learned Judge who tried
" it and by
the Court of Appeal, the question to be decided has been the
"
subject of some uncertainty and much argument." He went on to
say
that the difficulties in giving relief were concerned with
form and not with
25
substance.
The main difficulty, I think, lies in discovering from the
state-
ment of claim what the cause of action was. Lord Ashburton
sought
relief from the consequences of having advanced money on
mortgage to
several persons of whom the defendant Nocton was one.
The statement
of claim consists of a long narrative of events
interspersed with complaints.
Although in the end the vital fact
was that Nocton was Ashburton's solicitor,
there is no allegation
of any retainer and nothing is pleaded in contract.
The fact that
Nocton was a solicitor emerges only in the framing of the
complaint
in paragraph 13 where it was said that Nocton's advice to make
the
advance of £65,000 " was not that of a solicitor advising
his client in
" good faith but was given for his own private
ends ". The relief asked for
in respect of this transaction
is a declaration that the plaintiff " was im-
" properly
advised and induced by the defendant Nocton whilst acting as
"
the plaintiff's confidential solicitor " to advance £65,000.
In paragraphs
31 to 33 of the statement of claim it is related
that the plaintiff was asked
to release part of his security for
the loan ; and it is said that " The defendant
" Nocton
in advising the plaintiff to execute the said release allowed the
"'
plaintiff to believe that he was advising the plaintiff independently
and in
" good faith and in the plaintiff's interest". No
separate relief was sought
in respect of this transaction.
Until the
case reached this House no substantial point of law was
raised.
Neville, J. at the trial held that the only issue raised
by the statement of
claim was whether the defendant Nocton was
guilty of fraud and that the
plaintiff had failed to prove it. The
Court of Appeal agreed with the
judge's view of the pleadings.
Cozens-Hardy, M.R. said that if damages
had been claimed on the
ground of negligence, the action would have been
practically
undefended. But it was then too late to amend the statement
of
claim if only because a new cause of action would have been
statute-
barred. On the facts the Court of Appeal reversed in part
the judge's
finding of fraud, holding that there was fraud in
relation to the release.
In this
House at the conclusion of the Appellant's argument the
Respondent's
counsel was told that the House was unlikely to differ from
the
judgment of Neville, J. on fraud. The pith of the Respondent's
argu-
ment is reported as follows at page 943: " Assuming
that fraud is out of the
" question, the allegations in the
statement of claim are wide enough to found
" a claim for
dereliction of duty by a person occupying a fiduciary relation.
"
In the old cases in equity the term ' fraud' was frequently applied
to cases
" of a breach of fiduciary obligation." He was
then stopped.
It can now
be understood why Lord Haldane regarded the question as
one of
form rather than of substance. The first question which the House
had
to consider was whether the statement of claim was wide enough
to
cover negligence. Lord Parmoor thought that it was and at page
965 decided
the appeal on that ground. So I think in the end did
Lord Dunedin at
page 965, but he also expressed his agreement with
the opinion of Haldane,
L.C. Lord Haldane, with whom Lord Atkinson
concurred, thought that
possibly negligence was covered, but he
did not take the view that the
statement of claim must be
interpreted either as an allegation of deceit or as
an allegation
of negligence. He said at page 946: " There is a third form of
"
procedure to which the statement of claim approximated very closely,
and
" that is the old bill in Chancery to enforce
compensation for breach of a
" fiduciary obligation. There
appears to have been an impression that the
" necessity which
recent authorities have established of proving moral fraud
"
in order to succeed in an action of deceit has narrowed the scope of
this
" remedy. For the reasons which I am about to offer to
your Lordships, I do
" not think that this is so." The
Lord Chancellor then went on to examine
Deny v. Peek in
order to determine exactly what it had decided.
I
find most interest for present purposes in the speech of Lord
Shaw.
He held at page 967 that the pleadings disclosed " a
claim for liability upon a
" ground quite independent of
fraud, namely, of misrepresentations and
" misstatements made
by a person entrusted with a duty to another, and
" in
failure of that duty." He posed at page 968 what he considered
to be the
crucial question: —" What was the relation in
which the parties stood to
26
"
each other at the time of the transaction." He stated at page
969 that the
defendant was Lord Ashburton's solicitor and so under
a duty to advise.
He concluded at page 972 in the following terms:
"Once the relations of
" parties have been ascertained
to be those in which a duty is laid upon one
" person of
giving information or advice to another upon which that other is
"
entitled to rely as the basis of a transaction, responsibility for
error
" amounting to misrepresentation in any statement made
will attach to the
" adviser or informer, although the
information and advice have been given
" not fraudulently but
in good faith. It is admitted in the present case
" that
misrepresentations were made; that they were material; that they
"
were the cause of the loss; that they were made by a solicitor to
his
" client in a situation in which the client was entitled
to rely, and did rely,
" upon the information received. I
accordingly think that that situation
" is plainly open for
the application of the principle of liability to which I
"
have referred, namely, liability for the consequences of a failure of
duty
" in circumstances in which it was a matter equivalent
to contract between
" the parties that that duty should be
fulfilled." Lord Shaw does not
anywhere in his speech refer
to the relationship as being of a fiduciary
character.
Haldane,
L.C., at page 948 laid down the general principle in much the
same
terms. He said: " Although liability for negligence in word has
in
" material respects been developed in our law differently
from liability for
" negligence in act, it is none the less
true that a man may come under a
" special duty to exercise
care in giving information or advice. I should
" accordingly
be sorry to be thought to lend countenance to the idea that
"
recent decisions have been intended to stereotype the cases in which
people
" can be held to have assumed such a special duty.
Whether such a duty has
" been assumed must depend on the
relationship of the parties, and it is at
" least certain
that there are a good many cases in which that relationship may
"
be properly treated as giving rise to a special duty of care in
statement."
It is quite true that Haldane, L.C. applied this
principle only to cases of
breach of fiduciary duty. But that was
inevitable on the facts of the case
since upon the view of the
pleading on which he was proceeding it was
necessary to show
equitable fraud.
In my
judgment the effect of this case is as follows. The House
clearly
considered the view of Deny v. Peek, exemplified
in Le Lievre v. Gould,
too narrow. It considered
that outside contract (for contract was not
pleaded in the case),
there could be a special relationship between parties
which
imposed a duty to give careful advice and accurate information.
The
majority of their Lordships did not extend the application of
this principle
beyond the breach of a fiduciary obligation but
none of them said anything
at all to show that it was limited to
fiduciary obligation. Your Lordships
can, therefore, proceed upon
the footing that there is such a general principle
and that it is
for you to say to what cases, beyond those of fiduciary obliga-
tion,
it can properly be extended.
I shall
not at this stage deal in any detail with Robinson v. National
Bank
of Scotland. Its chief relevance is to Mr. Foster's
second point. All that
need be said about it on his first point is
that it is no authority for the
proposition that those
relationships which give rise to a special duty of care
are
limited to the contractual and the fiduciary. On the contrary, it
is
a clear authority for the view that Lord Haldane did not mean
the general
principle he stated in Nocton v. Ashburton
to be limited to fiduciary rela-
tionships. He said at page
157 that he wished emphatically to repeat what he
had said in
Nocton v. Ashburton, that it would be a great mistake
to suppose
that the principle in Deny v. Peek affected
the freedom of action of the
courts in recognising special duties
arising out of other kinds of relation-
ship. He went on: "
The whole of the doctrine as to fiduciary relationships,
" as
to the duty of care arising from implied as well as express
contracts,
" as to the duty of care arising from other
special relationships which the
" courts may find to exist in
particular cases, still remains, and I should be
" very sorry
if any word fell from me which should suggest that the courts are
"
in any way hampered in recognising that the duty of care may be
estab-
" lished when such cases really occur."
27
I come
next to Donoghue v. Stevenson. In his celebrated speech
in that
case Lord Atkin did two things. He stated at page 580 what
he described as
a general conception and from that conception he
formulated at page 599 a
specific proposition of law. In between
at page 584 he gave a warning
" against the danger of stating
propositions of law in wider terms than is
" necessary, lest
essential factors be omitted in the wider survey and the
"
inherent adaptability of English law be unduly restricted ".
What Lord
Atkin called a " general conception of relations giving rise
"
to a duty of care " is now often referred to as the principle of
proximity.
You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or
omissions which you can
reasonably foresee would be likely to
injure your neighbour. In the eyes
of the law your neighbour is a
person who is so closely and directly affected
by your act that
you ought reasonably to have him in contemplation as
being so
affected when you are directing your mind to the acts or
omissions
which are called in question.
The
specific proposition arising out of this conception is that " a
manu-
" facturer of products, which he sells in such a form
as to show that he
" intends them to reach the ultimate
consumer in the form in which they
" left him with no
reasonable possibility of intermediate examination, and
"
with the knowledge that the absence of reasonable care in the
preparation
" or putting up of the products will result in an
injury to the consumer's
" life or property, owes a duty to
the consumer to take that reasonable
" care".
Now, it is
not in my opinion a sensible application of what Lord Atkin
was
saying for a judge to be invited on the facts of any particular case
to
say whether or not there was " proximity " between
the plaintiff and the
defendant. That would be a misuse of a
general conception and it is not
the way in which English law
develops. What Lord Atkin did was to use
his general conception to
open up a category of cases giving rise to a special
duty. It was
already clear that the law recognised the existence of such
duty
in the category of articles that were dangerous in themselves.
What
Donoghue v. Stevenson did may be described
either as the widening of
an old category or as the creation of a
new and similar one. The general
conception can be used to produce
other categories in the same way. An
existing category grows as
instances of its application multiply until the
time comes when
the cell divides.
Lord
Thankerton and Lord Macmillan approached the problem funda-
mentally
in the same way, though they left any general conception on
which
they were acting to be implied. They enquired directly—Lord
Thankerton
at page 603 and Lord Macmillan at pages 619 and
620,—whether the rela-
tionship between the plaintiff and
the defendant was such as to give rise to a
duty to take care. It
is significant, whether it is a coincidence or not, that the
term
" special relationship " used by Lord Thankerton is also
the one used
by Lord Haldane in Nocton v. Ashburton. The
field is very different but the
object of the search is the same.
In my
opinion the Appellants in their argument tried to press Donoghue
v.
Stevenson too hard. They asked whether the principle of
proximity
should not apply as well to words as to deeds. I think
it should, but as it
is only a general conception it does not get
them very far. Then they
take the specific proposition laid down
by Donoghue v. Stevenson and try
to apply it
literally to a certificate or a banker's reference. That will not
do,
for a general conception cannot be applied to pieces of paper in
the
same way as to articles of commerce or to writers in the same
way as to
manufacturers. An inquiry into the possibilities of
intermediate examination
of a certificate will not be fruitful.
The real value of Donoghue v. Stevenson
to the
argument in this case is that it shows how the law can be
developed
to solve particular problems. Is the relationship
between the parties in
this case such that it can be brought
within a category giving rise to a special
duty? As always in
English law, the first step in such an inquiry is to see
how far
the authorities have gone, for new categories in the law do
not
spring into existence overnight.
28
It would
be surprising if the sort of problem that is created by the facts
of
this case had never until recently arisen in English law. As a
problem
it is a by-product of the doctrine of consideration. If
the Respondents had
made a nominal charge for the reference, the
problem would not exist. If
it were possible in English law to
construct a contract without consideration,
the problem would move
at once out of the first and general phase into
the particular;
and the question would be, not whether on the facts of
the case
there was a special relationship, but whether on the facts of
the
case there was a contract.
The
Respondents in this case cannot deny that they were performing
a
service. Their sheet anchor is that they were performing it
gratuitously
and therefore no liability for its performance can
arise. My Lords, in
my opinion this is not the law. A promise
given without consideration to
perform a service cannot be
enforced as a contract by the promisee; but if
the service is in
fact performed and done negligently, the promisee can
recover in
an action in tort. This is the foundation of the liability of
a
gratuitous bailee. In the famous case of Coggs v. Bernard
(1703) Smith's
Leading Cases 13th Ed. Vol. 1 p. 175, where the
defendant had charge of
brandy belonging to the plaintiff and had
spilt a quantity of it, there was
a motion in arrest of judgment "
for that it was not alleged in the declara-
" tion that the
defendant was a common porter, nor averred that he had
"
anything for his pains ". The declaration was held to be good
notwith-
standing that there was not any consideration laid.
Gould, J. said: " The
" reason of the action is, the
particular trust reposed in the defendant,
" to which he has
concurred by his assumption, and in the executing which
" he
has miscarried by his neglect." This proposition is not limited
to the
law of bailment. In Skelton v. London & North
Western Railway Co. [1867]
L.R. 2 C.P. 631, Willes, J. at 636
applied it generally to the law of negli-
gence. He said: "
Actionable negligence must consist in the breach of
'' some duty
... If a person undertakes to perform a voluntary act, he is
"
liable if he performs it improperly, but not if he neglects to
perform it.
" Such is the result of the decision in the case
of Coggs v. Bernard." Like-
wise in Banbury
v. Bank of Montreal [1918] A.C. 626, where the bank
had
advised a customer on his investments, Finlay, L.C. at 654
said: " He is
" under no obligation to advise, but if he
takes upon himself to do so, he
" will incur liability if he
does so negligently."
The
principle has been applied to cases where as a result of the
negligence
no damage was done to person or to property and the
consequential loss
was purely financial. In Wilkinson v.
Coverdale (1793) 1 Esp. 75 the
defendant undertook
gratuitously to get a fire policy renewed for the
plaintiff, but,
in doing so, neglected formalities, the omission of which
rendered
the policy inoperative. It was held that an action would lie. In
two
similar cases the defendants succeeded on the ground that
negligence
was not proved in fact. Both cases were thus decided on
the basis that
in law an action would He. In the first of them,
Shiells v. Blackburne [1789]
1 H. Bl. 158, the
defendant had, acting voluntarily and without compensa-
tion, made
an entry of the plaintiff's leather as wrought leather instead
of
dressed leather, with the result that the leather was seized.
In Dartnall
v. Howard (1825) B. & C. 345 the defendants
purchased an annuity for the
plaintiff but on the personal
security of two insolvent persons. The court,
after verdict,
arrested the judgment upon the ground that the defendants
appeared
to be gratuitous agents and that it was not averred that they
had
acted either with negligence or dishonesty.
Many cases
could be cited in which the same result has been achieved by
setting
up some nominal consideration and suing in contract instead of
in
tort. In Coggs v. Bernard Holt, C.J. at page 189 put
the obligation on
both grounds He said : " Secondly, it is
objected, that there is no considera-
tion to ground this promise
upon, and therefore the undertaking is but
" nudum pactum.
But to this I answer, that the owners trusting him with the
"
goods is a sufficient consideration to oblige him to a careful
management.
" Indeed, if the agreement had been executory, to
carry these brandies from
" the one place to the other
such a day, the defendant had not been bound to
" carry them.
But this is a different case, for assumpsit does not only
signify
29
" a
future agreement, but in such a case as this, it signifies an actual
entry
" upon the thing, and taking the trust upon himself.
And if a man will
" do that, and miscarries in the
performance of his trust, an action will lie
" against him
for that, though nobody could have compelled him to do the
"
thing."
De
La Bere v. Pearson Ltd. [1908] 1 KB 280 is an example of a case
of this sort decided on the ground
that there was a sufficiency of considera-
tion. The defendants
advertised in their newspaper that their city editor
would answer
inquiries from readers of the paper desiring financial advice.
The
plaintiff asked for the name of a good stockbroker. The editor
recom-
mended the name of a person whom he knew to be an outside
broker and
whom he ought to have known, if he had made proper
inquiries, to be an
undischarged bankrupt. The plaintiff dealt
with him and lost his money.
The case being brought in contract,
Vaughan Williams, L.J. thought at 287
that there was sufficient
consideration in the fact that the plaintiff consented
to the
publication of his question in the defendants' paper if the
defendants
so chose. For Sir Gorell Barnes, President, at page 289
the consideration
appears to have lain in the plaintiff addressing
an inquiry as invited. In the
same way when in Everett v.
Griffiths [1920] 3 K.B. 163 the Court of Appeal
was
considering the liability of a doctor towards the person he was
certifying,
Scrutton, L.J. at page 191 said that the submission to
treatment would be a
good consideration.
My Lords,
I have cited these instances so as to show that in one way
or
another the law has ensured that in this type of case a just result
has
been reached. But I think that today the result can and should
be achieved
by the application of the law of negligence and that
it is unnecessary and
undesirable to construct an artificial
consideration. I agree with Sir Frederick
Pollock's note on the
case of De La Bere v. Pearson, where he said in
"Contracts",
13th Edn., page 140, that "the cause of action is better
"
regarded as arising from default in the performance of a voluntary
"
undertaking independent of contract".
My Lords,
it is true that this principle of law has not yet been
clearly
applied to a case where the service which the defendant
undertakes to perform
is or includes the obtaining and imparting
of information. But I cannot
see why it should not be: and if it
had not been thought erroneously that
Deny v. Peek
negatived any liability for negligent statements, I think that
by
now it probably would have been. It cannot matter whether the
inform-
ation consists of fact or of opinion or is a mixture of
both, nor whether it
was obtained as a result of special inquiries
or comes direct from facts
already in the defendant's possession
or from his general store of profes-
sional knowledge. One cannot,
as I have already endeavoured to show,
distinguish in this respect
between a duty to inquire and a duty to state.
I think,
therefore, that there is ample authority to justify your Lordships
in
saying now that the categories of special relationships which may
give
rise to a duty to take care in word as well as in deed are
not limited to
contractual relationships or to relationships of
fiduciary duty, but include
also relationships which in the words
of Lord Shaw in Nocton v. Ashburton
at page 972 are "
equivalent to contract" that is, where there is an assump-
tion
of responsibility in circumstances in which, but for the absence of
con-
sideration, there would be a contract. Where there is an
express undertaking,
an express warranty as distinct from mere
representation, there can be
little difficulty. The difficulty
arises in discerning those cases in which the
undertaking is to be
implied. In this respect the absence of consideration
is not
irrelevant. Payment for information or advice is very good
evidence
that it is being relied upon and that the informer or
adviser knows that it is.
Where there is no consideration, it will
be necessary to exercise greater
care in distinguishing between
social and professional relationships and
between those which are
of a contractual character and those which are not.
It may often
be material to consider whether the adviser is acting purely
out
of good nature or whether he is getting his reward in some indirect
form.
The service that a bank performs in giving a reference is
not done simply
out of a desire to assist commerce. It would
discourage the customers of
the bank if their deals fell through
because the bank had refused to testify
to their credit when it
was good.
30
I have had
the advantage of reading all the opinions prepared by your
Lordships
and of studying the terms which your Lordships have framed
by way
of definition of the sort of relationship which gives rise to a
responsi-
bility towards those who act upon information or advice
and so creates a
duty of care towards them. I do not understand
any of your Lordships to
hold that it is a responsibility imposed
by law upon certain types of persons
or in certain sorts of
situations. It is a responsibility that is voluntarily
accepted or
undertaken either generally where a general relationship, such
as
that of solicitor and client or banker and customer, is created, or
specific-
ally in relation to a particular transaction. In the
present case the Appellants
were not, as in Woods v.
Martins Bank, Ltd. and Another [1959] 1 Q.B. 55,
the
customers or potential customers of the bank. Responsibility can
attach
only to the single act, i.e. the giving of the reference,
and only if the doing
of that act implied a voluntary undertaking
to assume responsibility. This
is a point of great importance
because it is, as I understand it, the foundation
for the ground
on which in the end the House dismisses the appeal. I do
not think
it possible to formulate with exactitude all the conditions
under
which the law will in a specific case imply a voluntary
undertaking any more
than it is possible to formulate those in
which the law will imply a contract.
Rut in so far as your
Lordships describe the circumstances in which an
implication will
ordinarily be drawn, I am prepared to adopt any one of
your
Lordships' statements as showing the general rule; and I pay the
same
respect to the statement by Denning, L.J. in his dissenting
judgment in
Candler v. Crane, Christmas & Co. [1951] 2
K.B. 164 about the circumstances
in which he says a duty to use
care in making a statement exists.
I do not
go further than this for two reasons. The first is that I have
found
in the speech of Lord Shaw in Nocton v. Ashburton and
in the idea
of a relationship that is equivalent to contract all
that is necessary to cover
the situation that arises in this case.
Mr. Gardiner does not claim to
succeed unless he can establish
that the reference was intended by the
Respondents to be
communicated by the National Provincial Bank to some
unnamed
customer of theirs, whose identity was immaterial to the
Respon-
dents, for that customer's use. All that was lacking was
formal consideration.
The case is well within the authorities I
have already cited and of which
Wilkinson v. Coverdale
is the most apposite example.
I shall
therefore content myself with the proposition that wherever there
is
a relationship equivalent to contract there is a duty of care. Such
a
relationship may be either general or particular. Examples of a
general
relationship are those of solicitor and client and of
banker and customer.
For the former Nocton v. Ashburton
has long stood as the authority and for
the latter there is
the decision of Salmon, J. in Woods v. Martins Bank
which
I respectfully approve. There may well be others yet to be
established.
Where there is a general relationship of this sort it
is unnecessary to do
more than prove its existence and the duty
follows. Where, as in the present
case, what is relied on is a
particular relationship created ad hoc, it will
be
necessary to examine the particular facts to see whether there is
an
express or implied undertaking of responsibility.
I regard
this proposition as an application of the general conception
of
proximity. Cases may arise in the future in which a new and
wider
proposition, quite independent of any notion of contract,
will be needed.
There may, for example, be cases in which a
statement is not supplied
for the use of any particular person,
any more than in Donoghue v.
Stevenson the ginger
beer was supplied for consumption by any particular
person; and it
will then be necessary to return to the general conception
of
proximity and to see whether there can be evolved from it, as was
done
in Donoghue v. Stevenson, a specific
proposition to fit the case. When
that has to be done, the
speeches of your Lordships today as well as the
judgment of
Denning, L.J. to which I have referred— and also, I may
add,
the proposition in the "Restatement" and the cases
which exemplify it
will afford good guidance as to what ought to
be said. I prefer to see what
shape such cases take before
committing myself to any formulation, for I
bear in mind Lord
Atkin's warning which I have quoted against placing
unnecessary
restrictions on the adaptability of English law. I have, I hope,
31
made it
clear that I take quite literally the dictum of Lord Macmillan,
so
often quoted from the same case, that " the categories of
negligence are
" never closed ". English law is wide
enough to embrace any new category
or proposition that exemplifies
the principle of proximity.
I have
another reason for caution. Since the essence of the matter in
the
present case and in others of the same type is the acceptance of
respon-
sibility, I should like to guard against the imposition of
restrictive terms
notwithstanding that the essential condition is
fulfilled. If a defendant
says to a plaintiff: " Let me do
this for you, do not waste your money
" in employing a
professional, I will do it for nothing and you can rely
" on
me", I do not think he could escape liability simply because
he
belonged to no profession or calling, had no qualifications or
special skill
and did not hold himself out as having any. The
relevance of these factors
is to show the unlikelihood of a
defendant in such circumstances assuming
a legal responsibility,
and as such they may often be decisive. But they are
not
theoretically conclusive and so cannot be the subject of definition.
It
would be unfortunate if they were. For it would mean that
plaintiffs would
seek to avoid the rigidity of the definition by
bringing the action in contract
as in De Le Bere v. Pearson and
setting up something that would do for
consideration. That to my
mind would be an undesirable development
in the law; and the best
way of avoiding it is to settle the law so that the
presence or
absence of consideration makes no difference.
Your
Lordships' attention was called to a number of cases in courts
of
first instance or of appeal which it was said would have been
decided
differently if the Appellants main contention was correct.
I do not propose
to go through them in order to consider whether
on the facts of each it
should or should not be upheld. I shall
content myself with saying that
in my opinion Le Lievre v.
Gould and all decisions based on its reasoning
(in which I
specifically include, lest otherwise it might be thought
that
generalia specialibus non derogant, the decision of
Devlin, J. in Heskell v.
Continental Exporters (1950) 1 All
E. R. 1033 at page 1044) can no longer
be regarded as
authoritative; and when similar facts arise in the future, the
case
will have to be judged afresh in the light of the principles which
the
House has now laid down.
My Lords,
I have devoted much time and thought to considering the first
reason
given by Mr. Foster for rejecting the Appellants' claim. I have
done
so not only because his reason was based on a ground so
fundamental
that it called for a full refutation, but also because
it is impossible to find
the correct answer on the facts to the
Appellants' claim until the relevant
criteria for ascertaining
whether or not there is a duty to take care have been
clearly
established. Once that is done their application to the facts of
this
case can be done very shortly, for the case then becomes a
very simple one.
I am
satisfied for the reasons I have given that a person for whose use
a
banker's reference is furnished is not, simply because no
consideration
has passed, prevented from contending that the
banker is responsible to
him for what he has said. The question is
whether the Appellants can set
up a claim equivalent to contract
and rely on an implied undertaking to
accept responsibility. Mr.
Foster's second point is that in Robinson v.
National
Bank of Scotland this House has already laid it down as a
general
rule that in the case of a banker furnishing a reference
that cannot be done.
I do not agree. The facts in that case have
been stated by my noble and
learned friend, Lord Reid, and I need
not repeat them. I think it is plain
upon those facts that the
bank in that case was not furnishing the reference
for the use of
the pursuer; he was not a person for whose use of the reference
they
were undertaking any responsibility, and that quite apart from
their
general disclaimer. Furthermore, the pursuer never saw the
reference;
he was given only what the Lord Justice-Clerk at page
1916 S.C. 58 described
as " a gloss of it". This makes
the connection between the pursuer and
the defendants far too
remote to constitute a relationship of a contractual
character.
On the
facts of the present case Mr. Foster has under his third head
argued
for the same result. He submits, first, that it ought not to be
32
inferred
that the Respondents knew that the National Provincial Bank
were
asking for the reference for the use of a customer. If the
Respondents
did know that, then Mr. Foster submits that they did
not intend that the
reference itself should be communicated to the
customer; it was intended
only as material upon which the
customer's bank could advise the customer
on its own
responsibility. I should consider it necessary to examine
these
contentions were it riot for the general disclaimer of
responsibility which
appears to me in any event to be conclusive.
I agree entirely with the
reasoning and conclusion on this point
of my noble and learned friend.
Lord Reid. A man cannot be said
voluntarily to be undertaking a
responsibility if at the very
moment when he is said to be accepting it he
declares that in fact
he is not. The problem of reconciling words of exemption
with the
existence of a duty arises only when a party is claiming
exemption
from a responsibility which he has already undertaken or
which he is
contracting to undertake. For this reason alone, I
would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Pearce
My lords,
"
Although liability for negligence in word ", said Lord Haldane
in Nocton
v. Ashburton [1914] AC 932 at page 948, "has
in material respects been
" developed in our law differently
from liability for negligence in act, it is
" none the less
true that a man may come under a special duty to exercise
"
care in giving information or advice. I should accordingly be sorry
to
" be thought to lend countenance to the idea that recent
decisions have
" been intended to stereotype the cases in
which people can be held to
" have assumed such a special
duty.
"
Whether such a duty has been assumed must depend on the
relationship
" of the parties, and it is at least certain
that there are a good many cases
" in which that relationship
may be properly treated as giving rise to a
" special duty of
care in statement."
The law of
negligence has been deliberately limited in its range by the
Courts'
insistence that there can be no actionable negligence in
vacuo
without the existence of some duty to the plaintiff. For
it would be imprac-
ticable to grant relief to everybody who
suffers damage through the careless-
ness of another.
The reason
for some divergence between the law of negligence in word and
that
of negligence in act is clear. Negligence in word creates
problems
different from those of negligence in act. Words are more
volatile than
deeds. They travel fast and far afield. They are
used without being
expended and take effect in combination with
innumerable facts and other
words. Yet they are dangerous and can
cause vast financial damage. How
far they are relied on unchecked
(by analogy with there being no probability
of intermediate
inspection—See Grant v. Australian Knitting Mills
Ltd.
[1936] AC 85) must in many cases be a matter of doubt
and difficulty. If the
mere hearing or reading of words were held
to create proximity, there might
be no limit to the persons to
whom the speaker or writer could be liable.
Damage by negligent
acts to persons or property on the other hand is more
visible and
obvious; its limits are more easily defined, and it is with
this
damage that the earlier cases were more concerned. It was not
until 1789
thai Pasley and Another v. Freeman, 3
T.R. 51, recognised and laid down a
duty of honesty in words to
the world at large—thus creating a remedy
designed to
protect <the economic as opposed to the physical interests of
the
community. Any attempts to extend this remedy by imposing a
duty of
care as well as a duty of honesty in representations by
word were curbed
by Deny v. Peek (14 App Cas 337).
In Cann
v. Wilson, 39 C.D. 39, it had been held that a valuer was
liable
in respect of a negligent valuation which he had been
employed by the
owner of property to make for the purpose of
raising a mortgage, and which
the valuer himself put before the
proposed mortgagee's solicitor. Chitty, J,
33
there
said: " It seems to me that the defendants knowingly placed
themselves
" in that position, and in point of law incurred a
duty towards him to use
" reasonable care in the preparation
of the document called a valuation.
" I think it is like the
case of the supply of ... the hairwash in the case of
"
George v. Skivington " (L.R. 5 Ex. 1), later approved in
Donoghue v.
Stevenson. Thus in the case of economic
damage alone he was drawing
an analogy from a case where physical
damage to the wife of a purchaser
was held to give rise to an
action for negligence.
Cann v.
Wilson was, however, overruled by Le Lievre v. Gould
[1893]
1 Q.B. 491 on the ground, erroneous as it seems to me,
that it could not
stand with Derry v. Peek. The
particular facts in Le Lievre v. Gould
justified the
particular decision as Denning, L.J. explained in Candler
v.
Crane, Christmas & Co. ([1951] 2 K.B. 164 at
181). But the ratio decidendi
was wrong since it attributed
to Derry v. Peek more than that case decided.
In
Nocton v. Ashburton ([1914] AC 932) this House
pointed out that too
much had been ascribed to Derry v.
Peek. Lord Haldane said at page 947:
" The discussion
of the case by the noble and learned lords who took part
" in
the decision appears to me to exclude the hypothesis that they
considered
" any other question to be before them than what
was the necessary founda-
" tion of an ordinary action for
deceit. They must indeed be taken to have
" thought that the
facts proved as to the relationship of the parties in Derry
"
v. Peek were not enough to establish any special duty
arising out of
" that relationship other than the general
duty of honesty. But they do not
" say that where a different
sort of relationship ought to be inferred from
" the
circumstances the case is to be concluded by asking whether an
action
" for deceit will lie. I think that the authorities
subsequent to the decision
" of the House of Lords shew a
tendency to assume that it was intended
" to mean more than
it did. In reality the judgment covered only a part
" of the
field in which liabilities may arise. There are other obligations
"
besides that of honesty, the breach of which may give a right to
damages.
" These obligations depend on principles which the
judges have worked
" out in the fashion that is
characteristic of a system where much of the
" law has always
been judge-made and unwritten." Lord Haldane spoke to
a like
effect in Robinson v. National Bank of Scotland, 1916 SC (HL) 154
at p. 157. "I think, as I said in Nocton's
case, that an exaggerated view
" was taken by a good many
people of the scope of the decision in Derry
" v.
Peek. The whole of the doctrine as to fiduciary relationships,
as to the
" duty of care arising from implied as well as
express contracts, as to the duty
" of care arising from
other special relationships which the Courts may
" find to
exist in particular cases, still remains, and I should be very
sorry
" if any word fell from me which should suggest that
the Courts are in any
" way hampered in recognising that the
duty of care may be established
" when such cases really
occur."
Lord
Haldane was thus in terms preserving unencumbered the area of
special
relationships which created a duty of care; and he was not
restrict-
ing the area to cases where courts of equity would find
a fiduciary duty.
The range
of negligence in act was greatly extended in Donoghue v.
Stevenson
[1932] AC 562 on the wide principle of the good neighbour;
sic
utere tuo ut alienum non laedas. It is argued that the
principles enunciated
in Donoghue v. Stevenson apply
fully to negligence in word. It may well
be that Wrottesley, J. in
Old Gate Estates, Ltd., 161 L.T. 227, put the matter
too
narrowly when he confined the applicability of the principles laid
down
in Donoghue v. Stevenson to negligence which
caused damage to life, limb
or health. But they were certainly not
purporting to deal with such issues
as, for instance, how far
economic loss alone without some physical or
material damage to
support it. can afford a cause of action in negligence
by act. See
Morrison Steamship Co. Ltd. v. Greystroke Castle [1947]
A.C.
265, where it was held that it could do so. The House in
Donoghue v.
Stevenson was, in fact, dealing with
negligent acts causing physical damage,
and the Opinions cannot be
read as if they were dealing with negligence in
word causing
economic damage. Had it been otherwise some consideration
would
have been given to problems peculiar to negligence in words. That
34
case,
therefore, can give no more help in this sphere than by
affording
some analogy from the broad outlook which it imposed on
the law relating
to physical negligence.
How wide
the sphere of the duty of care in negligence is to be laid
depends
ultimately upon the Courts' assessment of the demands of society
for
protection from the carelessness of others. Economic protection
has
lagged behind protection in physical matters where there is
injury to person
and property. It may be that the size and the
width of the range of possible
claims has acted as a deterrent to
extension of economic protection.
In this
sphere the law was developed in the United States in Glanzer
v.
Shepherd [1922] 233 N.Y. Rep. 236, where a public
weigher employed by a
vendor was held liable to a purchaser for
giving him a certificate which
negligently overstated the amount
of the goods supplied to him. The
defendant was thus engaged on a
task in which he knew vendor and pur-
chaser alike depended on his
skill and care and the fact that it was the
vendor who paid him
was merely an accident of commerce.
This case was followed and developed in later cases.
In the
Ultramares case ([1931] 255 N.Y. Rep. 170) however, the Court
felt
the undesirability of exposing defendants to a potential
liability " in an inde-
" terminate amount for an
indeterminate time to an indeterminate class ". It
decided
that auditors were not liable for negligence in the preparation
of
their accounts (of which they supplied thirty copies although
they were
not aware of the specific purpose, namely, to obtain
financial help) to a
plaintiff who lent money on the strength of
them.
In South
Africa, under a different system of law, two cases show a
similar
advance and subsequent restriction (Perlman v. Zonkendyk
[1934]
C.P.D. 151 and Herschell v. Marupi [1954]
3 SALR 464).
Some
guidance may be obtained from the case of Shiells v.
Blackburn
[1789] 1 H. Bl. 158, 162; 126 E.R. 94. There a
general merchant undertook
voluntarily and without reward to enter
a parcel of the goods of another,
together with a parcel of his
own of the same sort, at the Customs House
for exportation.
Acting, it was contended, with gross negligence, he made
the entry
under a wrong denomination whereby both parcels were seized.
The
plaintiff failed on the facts to make out a case of gross negligence.
But
Lord Loughborough said (at page 162 ; 96) " Where a
bailee undertakes to
" perform a gratuitous act, from which
the bailor alone is to receive benefit,
" there the bailee is
only liable for gross negligence ; but if a man gratuitously
"
undertakes to do a thing to the best of his skill, where his
situation or
" profession is such as to imply skill, an
omission of that skill is imputable
" to him as gross
negligence. If in this case a ship broker, or a clerk in
"
the Custom-House had undertaken to enter the goods, a wrong entry
would
" in them be gross negligence, because their situation
and employment
" necessarily imply a competent degree of
knowledge in making such entries."
Heath, J. said: "The
surgeon would also be liable for negligence if he
" undertook
gratis to attend a sick person, because his situation implies
"
skill in surgery; but if the patient applies to a man of a different
employ-
" ment or occupation for his gratuitous assistance,
who either does not
" exert all his skill, or administers
improper remedies to the best of his
" ability, such person
is not liable."
In
Gladwell v. Steggall, 5 Bing (N.C.) 733 ; 132 E.R.
1283, an infant
plaintiff, 10 years old, recovered damages for
injury to health from a surgeon
and apothecary who had treated
her. She did not sue in contract but
brought an action ex
delicto alleging a breach of duty arising out of his
employment
by her, although it was her father to whom the bill was made out.
And in
Wilkinson v. Coverdale, 1 Esp. 75 ; 170 E.R. 284, Lord
Kenyon
accepted the proposition that a defendant who had
gratuitously undertaken
to take out an insurance policy and who
did it negligently, could be liable
in damages.
In those
cases there was no dichotomy between negligence in act and in
word,
nor between physical and economic loss. The basis underlying them
Is
that if persons holding themselves out in a calling or situation or
profession
35
take on a
task within that calling or situation or profession they have a
duty
of skill and care. In terms of proximity one might say that they
are
in particularly close proximity to those who as they know are
relying
on their skill and care although the proximity is not
contractual.
The
reasoning of Shiells v. Blackburne was applied in
Everett v. Griffiths
[1920] 3 K.B. 163, 182, (see
also 217), where the Court of Appeal held that
a doctor owed a
duty of care to a man by whom he was not employed but
whom he had
a duty to examine under the Lunacy Act. It was also relied
on by
Denning, L.J. in his dissenting judgment in Candler v. Crane,
Christmas
& Co. [1951] 2 K.B. 164 at page 179. He reached
the conclusion that in
respect of reports and work that resulted
in such reports there was a duty of
care laid on "those
persons such as accountants, surveyors, valuers and
"
analysts, whose profession and occupation it is to examine books,
accounts
" and other things, and to make reports on which
other people—other than
" their clients—rely in
the ordinary course of business."
The duty
is in his opinion owed (apart from contractual duty to
their
employer) " to any third person to whom they themselves
show the accounts,
" or to whom they know their employer is
going to show the accounts, so
" as to induce him to invest
money or take some other action." He excludes
strangers of
whom they have heard nothing and to whom their employer
without
their knowledge may choose to hand their accounts. " The test
of
" proximity in these cases is : did the accountants know
that the accounts were
" required for submission to the
Plaintiff and use by him ". (It is to be noted
that these
expressions of opinion produce a result somewhat similar to
the
Restatement para. 552.) I agree with those words. In my
opinion they are
consonant with the earlier cases and with the
observations of Lord Haldane.
It is
argued that so to hold would create confusion in many aspects of
the
law and infringe the established rule that innocent
misrepresentation
gives no right to damages. I cannot accept that
argument. The true rule
is that innocent misrepresentation per
se gives no right to damages. If the
misrepresentation was
intended by the parties to form a warranty between
two contracting
parties, it gives on that ground a right to damages (Heilbutt,
Symons
& Co. v. Buckleton [19131 A.C. 30). If an innocent
misrepresentation
is made between parties in a fiduciary
relationship it may, on that ground,
give a right to claim damages
for negligence. There is also, in my opinion,
a duty of care
created by special relationships which though not fiduciary
give
rise to an assumption that care as well as honesty is demanded.
Was there
such a special relationship in the present case as to impose on
the
defendants a duty of care to the plaintiffs as the undisclosed
principals
for whom the National Provincial Bank was making the
enquiry? The
answer to that question depends on the circumstances
of the transaction.
If, for instance, they disclosed a casual
social approach to the enquiry no
such special relationship or
duty of care would be assumed (see Fish v.
Kelly 144
E.R. 78, 83). To import such a duty the representation must
normally,
I think, concern a business or professional transaction whose
nature
makes clear the gravity of the enquiry and the importance
and influence
attached to the answer. It is conceded that Salmon,
J., rightly found a duty
of care in Woods v. Martins
Bank, Ltd. [1959] 1 Q.B. 55, but the facts in that
case were
wholly different from those in the present case. A most
important
circumstance is the form of the enquiry and of the
answer. Both were here
plainly stated to be without liability. Mr.
Gardiner argues that those words
are not sufficiently precise to
exclude liability for negligence. Nothing, how-
ever, except
negligence could, in the facts of this case, create a liability
(apart
from fraud to which they cannot have been intended to refer
and against
which the words would be no protection since they
would be part of the
fraud). I do not, therefore, accept that even
if the parties were already
in contractual or other special
relationship the words would give no immunity
to a negligent
answer. But in any event they clearly prevent a special
relationship
from arising. They are part of the material from which one
deduces
whether a duty of care and a liability for negligence was assumed.
If
both parties say expressly (in a case where neither is deliberately
taking
advantage of the other) that there shall be no liability, I
do not find it possible
to say that a liability was assumed.
36
In
Robinson v. National Bank of Scotland also the
correspondence
expressly excluded responsibility. Possibly that
factor weighed with Lord
Haldane when (at p. 157) he said "
But when a mere enquiry is made by
" one banker of another
who stands in no special relation to him, then, in
" the
absence of special circumstances from which a contract to be
careful
" can be inferred, I think there is no duty excepting
the duty of common
" honesty to which I have referred."
I appreciate Mr. Gardiner's emphasis
on the general importance to
the business world of bankers' references and
the desirability
that in an integrated banking system there should be a duty
of
care with regard to them, but on the facts before us it is in my
opinion
not possible to hold that there was a special duty of care
and a liability
for negligence.
I would therefore dismiss the appeal.
(P/307I8) Wt. 8024—149 35 7/63 St.S./PA/19