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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] UKHL 2 (14 February 1980) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1980/2.html Cite as: [1980] 1 All ER 556, [1980] UKHL 2, [1980] AC 827 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/240
Die Jovis 14° Februarii 1980
Upon
Report from the Appellate Committee to
whom was referred the Cause
Photo Production
Limited against Securicor Transport Limited,
That
the Committee had heard Counsel as well on Monday
the 12th
as on Tuesday the 13th and Wednesday the
14th days of November
last upon the Petition and
Appeal of Securicor Transport Limited
of Old Swan
House, Chelsea Embankment, London, S.W.3 praying
that
the matter of the Order set forth in the Schedule
thereto, namely
an Order of Her Majesty's Court of
Appeal of the 15th day of March
1978 might be
reviewed before Her Majesty the Queen in Her
Court
of Parliament and that the said Order might be
reversed,
varied or altered or that the Petitioners might
have such other
relief in the premises as to Her Majesty
the Queen in Her Court of
Parliament might seem meet;
as also upon the Case of Photo
Production Limited
lodged in answer to the said Appeal; and
due
consideration had this day of what was offered on either
side
in this Cause:
It is
Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual
and
Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her
Majesty the Queen
assembled, That the said Order of
Her Majesty's Court of Appeal of
the 15th day of
March 1978 complained of in the said Appeal be,
and
the same is hereby, Reversed and that the Order of
Mr.
Justice MacKenna of the 7th day of April 1976 be,
and the same is
hereby, Restored: And it is further
Ordered, That
the Respondents do pay or cause to be
paid to the said Appellants
the Costs incurred by them
in the Court of Appeal and also the
Costs incurred by
them in respect of the said Appeal to this
House, the
amount of such last-mentioned Costs to be certified
by
the Clerk of the Parliaments if not agreed between the
parties:
And it is also further Ordered, That the Cause
be, and the
same is hereby, remitted back to the Queen's
Bench Division of the
High Court of Justice to do
therein as shall be just and
consistent with this
Judgment.
HOUSE OF LORDS
PHOTO PRODUCTION LIMITED (RESPONDENTS)
v.
SECURICOR TRANSPORT LIMITED (APPELLANTS)
Lord
Wilberforce
Lord Diplock
Lord Salmon
Lord Keith of
Kinkel
Lord Scarman
MY LORDS,
This
appeal arises from the destruction by fire of the respondents'
factory
involving loss and damage agreed to amount to £615,000.
The question is
whether the appellant is liable to the respondents
for this sum.
The
appellant is a company which provides security services. In 1968
it
entered into a contract with the respondents by which for a
charge of £8,15,0d.
(old currency) per week it agreed to
"provide their Night Patrol Service whereby
"four visits
per night shall be made seven nights per week and two visits
shall
"be made during the afternoon of Saturday and four
visits shall be made during
"the day of Sunday". The
contract incorporated printed Standard Conditions
which, in some
circumstances, might exclude or limit the appellant's liability.
The
questions in this appeal are (i) whether these conditions can be
invoked at
all in the events which happened and (ii) if so,
whether either the exclusion
provision, or a provision limiting
liability, can be applied on the facts. The
trial judge (MacKenna
J.) decided these issues in favour of the appellant. The
Court of
Appeal decided issue (i) in the respondents' favour invoking
the
doctrine of fundamental breach. Waller L.J. in addition would
have decided
for the respondents on issue (ii).
What
happened was that on a Sunday night the duty employee of the
appellant
was one Musgrove. It was not suggested that he was
unsuitable for the job or
that the appellant was negligent in
employing him. He visited the factory at the
correct time, but
when inside he deliberately started a fire by throwing a match
on
to some cartons. The fire got out of control and a large part of the
premises
was burnt down. Though what he did was deliberate, it was
not established
that he intended to destroy the factory. The
judge's finding was in these words:—
"Whether
Musgrove intended to light only a small fire (which was the
"very
least he meant to do) or whether he intended to cause much
more
"serious damage, and, in either case, what was the
reason for his act, are
"mysteries I am unable to solve".
This, and
it is important to bear it in mind when considering the judgments
in
the Court of Appeal, falls short of a finding that Musgrove
deliberately burnt
or intended to burn the respondents' factory.
The condition upon which the appellant relies reads, relevantly, as follows:
"Under
no circumstances shall the Company [Securicor] be responsible
"for
any injurious act or default by any employee of the Company
unless
"such act or default could have been foreseen and
avoided by the exercise
"of due diligence on the part of the
Company as his employer; nor, in any
"event, shall the
Company be held responsible for (a) Any loss suffered by
"the
customer through burglary, theft, fire or any other cause,
except
"insofar as such loss is solely attributable to the
negligence of the Com-
"pany's employees acting within the
course of their employment...".
There are
further provisions limiting to stated amounts the liability of
the
appellant upon which it relies in the alternative if held not
to be totally exempt.
2
It is
first necessary to decide upon the correct approach to a case such
as
this where it is sought to invoke an exception or limitation
clause in the contract.
The approach of the Master of the Rolls in
the Court of Appeal was to consider
first whether the breach was
"fundamental". If so, he said, the court itself
deprives
the party of the benefit of an exemption or limitation clause
([1978]
1 W.L.R. 863). The Lords Justices substantially followed
him in this argument.
The Master
of the Rolls in this was following the earlier decision of the
Court
of Appeal, and in particular his own judgment in Harbutt's
"Plasticine"
Ltd. v. Wayne Tank & Pump Co.
Ltd. [1970] 1 Q.B. 447. In that case Lord
Denning
distinguished two cases (a) the case where as the result of a breach
of
contract the innocent party has, and exercises, the right to
bring the contract
to an end, (b) the case where the breach
automatically brings the contract to
an end, without the innocent
party having to make an election whether to
terminate the contract
or to continue it. In the first case the Master of the
Rolls,
purportedly applying this House's decision in the Suisse
Atlantique case [1967]
1 A.C. 361, but in effect two citations
from two of their Lordships' speeches,
extracted a rule of law
that the "termination" of the contract brings it, and
with
it the exclusion clause, to an end. The Suisse Atlantique
case in his view
"affirms the long line of cases in this
court that when one party has been guilty
"of a fundamental
breach of the contract . . . and the other side accepts it, so
"that
the contract comes to an end . . . then the guilty party cannot rely
on an
"exception or limitation clause to escape from his
liability for the breach"
(Harbutt's case p.467). He
then applied the same principle to the second case.
My Lords,
whatever the intrinsic merit of this doctrine, as to which I
shall
have something to say later, it is clear to me that so far
from following this
House's decision in the Suisse Atlantique
it is directly opposed to it and that
the whole purpose and
tenor of the Suisse Atlantique was to repudiate it.
The
lengthy, and perhaps I may say sometimes indigestible speeches of
their
Lordships, are correctly summarised in the headnote—holding
No. 3—"That
"the question whether an exceptions
clause was applicable where there was a
"fundamental breach
of contract was one of the true construction of the
"contract".
That there was any rule of law by which exceptions clauses
are
eliminated, or deprived of effect, regardless of their terms,
was clearly not the
view of Viscount Dilhorne, Lord Hodson, or of
myself. The passages invoked
for the contrary view of a rule of
law consist only of short extracts from two
of the speeches—on
any view a minority. But the case for the doctrine does
not even
go so far as that. Lord Reid, in my respectful opinion, and I
recognise
that I may not be the best judge of this matter, in his
speech read as a whole,
cannot be claimed as a supporter of a rule
of law. Indeed he expressly disagreed
with the Master of the
Rolls' observations in two previous cases (Karsales
(Harrow)
Ltd. v. Wallis [1956] 1 WLR 936 and U.G.S. Finance
Ltd. v. National
Mortgage Bank of Greece [1964] 1
Lloyd's Rep. 446 in which he had put forward
the "rule of
law" doctrine. In order to show how close the disapproved
doctrine
is to that sought to be revived in Harbutt's case
I shall quote one passage from
Karsales:
"Notwithstanding
earlier cases which might suggest the contrary, it is
"now
settled that exempting clauses of this kind, no matter how
widely
"they are expressed, only avail the party when he is
carrying out his
"contract in its essential respects. He is
not allowed to use them as a cover
"for misconduct or
indifference or to enable him to turn a blind eye to
his
"obligations. They do not avail him when he is guilty of
a breach which
"goes to the root of the contract". (I.c.
p.940).
Lord Reid
comments as to this that he could not deduce from the
authorities
cited in Karsales that the proposition stated
in the judgments could be regarded
as in any way "settled
law" (p.401).
His
conclusion is stated on p.405: "In my view no such rule of law
ought to
"be adopted"—adding that there is room
for legislative reform.
3
My Lords,
in the light of this, the passage cited by the Master of the
Rolls
has to be considered. For convenience I restate it:
"If
fundamental breach is established the next question is what
effect,
"if any, that has on the applicability of other terms
of the contract. This
"question has often arisen with regard
to clauses excluding liability, in
"whole or in part, of the
party in breach. I do not think that there is
"generally much
difficulty where the innocent party has elected to treat
"the
breach as a repudiation, bring the contract to an end and sue
for
"damages. Then the whole contract has ceased to exist
including the
"exclusion clause, and I do not see how that
clause can then be used to
"exclude an action for loss which
will be suffered by the innocent party
"after it has ceased
to exist, such as loss of the profit which would have
"accrued
if the contract had run its full term." (Suisse At/antique
[1967]
1 A.C. at p.398.)
It is with
the utmost reluctance that, not forgetting the "beams" that
may
exist elsewhere, I have to detect here a note of ambiguity or
perhaps even of
inconsistency. What is referred to is "loss
which will be suffered by the innocent
"party after (the
contract) has ceased to exist" and I venture to think that
all
that is being said, rather elliptically, relates only to what
is to happen in the
future, and is not a proposition as to the
immediate consequences caused by
the breach: if it were that would
be inconsistent with the full and reasoned
discussion which
follows.
It is only
because of Lord Reid's great authority in the law that I have
found
it necessary to embark on what in the end may be superfluous
analysis. For I
am convinced that, with the possible exception of
Lord Upjohn whose critical
passage, when read in full, is somewhat
ambiguous, their Lordships, fairly
read, can only be taken to have
rejected those suggestions for a rule of law
which had appeared in
the Court of Appeal and to have firmly stated that
the question is
one of construction, not merely of course of the exclusion
clause
alone, but of the whole contract.
Much has
been written about the Suisse Atlantique. Each speech has
been
subjected to various degrees of analysis and criticism, much
of it constructive.
Speaking for myself I am conscious of
imperfections of terminology, though
sometimes in good company.
But I do not think that I should be conducing
to the clarity of
the law by adding to what was already too ample a discussion
a
further analysis which in turn would have to be interpreted. I have
no second
thoughts as to the main proposition that the question
whether, and to what
extent, an exclusion clause is to be applied
to a fundamental breach, or a breach
of a fundamental term, or
indeed to any breach of contract, is a matter of
construction of
the contract. Many difficult questions arise and will continue
to
arise in the infinitely varied situations in which contracts come to
be breached
—by repudiatory breaches, accepted or not,
anticipatory breaches, by breaches
of conditions or of various
terms and whether by negligent, or deliberate action
or otherwise.
But there are ample resources in the normal rules of contract Law
for
dealing with these without the superimposition of a judicially
invented rule
of law. I am content to leave the matter there with
some supplementary observa-
tions.
1. The
doctrine of "fundamental breach" in spite of its
imperfections and
doubtful parentage has served a useful purpose.
There was a large number of
problems, productive of injustice, in
which it was worse than unsatisfactory
to leave exception clauses
to operate. Lord Reid referred to these in the Suisse
Atlantique
(p.406), pointing out at the same time that the doctrine
of fundamental
breach was a dubious specific. But since then
Parliament has taken a hand: it
has passed the Unfair Contract
Terms Act 1977. This Act applies to consumer
contracts and those
based on standard terms and enables exception clauses
to be
applied with regard to what is just and reasonable. It is significant
that
Parliament refrained from legislating over the whole field of
contract. After
this Act, in commercial matters generally, when
the parties are not of unequal
4
bargaining
power, and when risks are normally borne by insurance, not only
is
the case for judicial intervention undemonstrated, but there is
everything to
be said, and this seems to have been Parliament's
intention, for leaving the
parties free to apportion the risks as
they think fit and for respecting their
decisions.
At the
stage of negotiation as to the consequences of a breach, there is
every-
thing to be said for allowing the parties to estimate their
respective claims
according to the contractual provisions they
have themselves made, rather than
for facing them with a legal
complex so uncertain as the doctrine of fundamental
breach must
be. What, for example, would have been the position of the
respon-
dents' factory if instead of being destroyed it had been
damaged, slightly or
moderately or severely? At what point does
the doctrine (with what logical
justification I have not
understood) decide, ex post facto, that the breach
was
(factually) fundamental before going on to ask whether legally
it is to be re-
garded as fundamental? How is the date of
"termination" to be fixed? Is it the
date of the
incident causing the damage, or the date of the innocent
party's
election, or some other date? All these difficulties arise
from the doctrine and
are left unsolved by it.
At the
judicial stage there is still more to be said for leaving cases to
be
decided straightforwardly on what the parties have bargained
for rather than
upon analysis, which becomes progressively more
refined, of decisions in other
cases leading to inevitable
appeals. The learned judge was able to decide this
case on normal
principles of contractual law with minimal citation of authority.
I
am sure that most commercial judges have wished to be able to do the
same
(cf. Trade & Transport Inc. v. lino Kaiun
Kaisha Ltd. [1973] 1 W.L.R. 210,
232 per Kerr J.). In my
opinion they can and should.
2. The
case of Harbutt must clearly be overruled. It would be enough
to
put that upon its radical inconsistency with the Suisse
Atlantique. But even if
the matter were res Integra I
would find the decision to be based upon un-
satisfactory
reasoning as to the "termination" of the contract and the
effect of
"termination" on the plaintiffs' claim for
damage. I have, indeed, been unable
to understand how the doctrine
can be reconciled with the well accepted prin-
ciple of law,
stated by the highest modern authority, that when in the context of
a
breach of contract one speaks of "termination", what is
meant is no more than
that the innocent party or, in some cases,
both parties, are excused from
further performance. Damages, in
such cases, are then claimed under the con-
tract, so what reason
in principle can there be for disregarding what the con-
tract
itself says about damages—whether it "liquidates"
them, or limits them,
or excludes them? These difficulties arise
in part from uncertain or inconsistent
terminology. A vast number
of expressions are used to describe situations
where a breach has
been committed by one party of such a character as to
entitle the
other party to refuse further performance: discharge,
rescission,
termination, the contract is at an end, or dead, or
displaced; clauses cannot
survive, or simply go. I have come to
think that some of these difficulties can
be avoided; in
particular the use of "rescission", even if distinguished
from
rescission ab initio, as an equivalent for discharge,
though justifiable in some
contexts (see Johnson v. Agnew
[1979] 1 All E.P. 883) may lead to confusion in
others. To
plead for complete uniformity may be to cry for the moon. But
what
can and ought to be avoided is to make use of these
confusions in order to
produce a concealed and unreasoned legal
innovation: to pass, for example,
from saying that a party, victim
of a breach of contract, is entitled to refuse
further
performance, to saying that he may treat the contract as at an end,
or
as rescinded, and to draw from this the proposition, which is
not analytical
but one of policy, that all or (arbitrarily) some
of the clauses of the contract
lose, automatically, their force,
regardless of intention.
If this
process is discontinued the way is free to use such words as
"discharge"
or "termination" consistently with
principles as stated by modern authority
which Harbutt's case
disregards. I venture with apology to relate the classic
passages:
In Heyman v. Darwins Ltd. Lord Porter said:
"To say that the contract is rescinded or has come to an end ???????as
"ceased to exist may in individual cases convey the truth with s??????nt
5
"accuracy,
but the fuller expression that the injured party is thereby
"absolved
from future performance of his obligations under the contract
"is
a more exact description of the position. Strictly speaking, to say
that,
"on acceptance of the renunciation of a contract, the
contract is rescinded is
"incorrect. In such a case the
injured party may accept the renunciation as
"a breach going
to the root of the whole of the consideration. By that
"acceptance
he is discharged from further performance and may bring an
"action
for damages, but the contract itself is not rescinded."
([1942]
A.C.356, 399)
and
similarly Lord Macmillan at p.373: see also Boston Deep Sea
Fishing &
Ice Co. Ltd. v. Ansell 39 Ch.D. 339, 361
per Bowen L.J. In Moschi v. Lep Air
Services Ltd. [1973]
A.C. 331, 350, my noble and learned friend Lord Diplock
drew a
distinction (relevant for that case) between primary obligations
under a
contract, which on "rescission" generally come
to an end, and secondary
obligations which may then arise. Among
the latter he includes an obligation
to pay compensation, i.e.,
damages. And he states in terms that this latter
obligation "is
just as much an obligation arising from the contract as are
the
"primary obligations that it replaces". My noble and
learned friend has
developed this line of thought in an
enlightening manner in his opinion which
I have now had the
benefit of reading.
These
passages I believe to state correctly the modern law of contract in
the
relevant respects: they demonstrate that the whole foundation
of Harbutt's
case is unsound. A fortiori, in
addition to Harbutt's case there must be over-
ruled the
case of Wathes (Western) Ltd. v. Austins (Menswear) Ltd.
[1976]
1 Lloyd's Rep. 14 which sought to apply the doctrine of
fundamental breach
to a case where, by election of the innocent
party, the contract had not been
terminated, an impossible
acrobatic, yet necessarily engendered by the doctrine.
Similarly,
Charterhouse v. Tolly [1963] 2 Q.B. 683 must be
over-ruled, though
the result might have been reached on
construction of the contract.
I must
add to this, by way of exception to the decision not to "gloss"
the
Suisse Atlantique a brief observation on the deviation
cases, since some reliance
has been placed upon them,
particularly upon the decision of this House in
Hain Steamship
Co. Ltd. v. Tate & Lyle Ltd. [1936] 2 All E.R. 597
(so earlier
than the Suisse Atlantique) in the support of
the "Harbutt" doctrine. I suggested
in the
Suisse Atlantique that these cases can be regarded as
proceeding upon
normal principles applicable to the law of
contract generally viz., that it is a
matter of the parties'
intentions whether and to what extent clauses in shipping
contracts
can be applied after a deviation, i.e., a departure from the
con-
tractually agreed voyage or adventure. It may be preferable
that they should
be considered as a body of authority sui
generis with special rules derived from
historical and
commercial reasons. What on either view they cannot do is to
lay
down different rules as to contracts generally from those
later stated by this
House in Heyman v. Darwins (I.c.).
The ingenious use by Donaldson J. in
Kenyon Son & Craven
Ltd. v. Baxter Hoare & Co. Ltd. [1971] 1 W.L.R.
519
of the doctrine of deviation in order to reconcile the Suisse
Atlantique with
Harbutt's case, itself based in part
on the use of the doctrine of deviation, illu-
strates the
contortions which that case has made necessary and would
be
unnecessary if it vanished as an authority.
It is not
necessary to review fully the numerous cases in which the
doctrine
of fundamental breech has been applied or discussed.
Many of these have now
been superseded by the Unfair Contract
Terms Act 1977. Others, as decisions,
may be justified as
depending upon the construction of the contract (cf.
Levison
v. Patent Steam Carpet Cleaning Co. Ltd. [1978] Q.B. 69)
in the light of
well known principles such as that stated in
Alderslade v. Hendon Laundry
Ltd. [1945] K.B. 189.
In this
situation the present case has to be decided. As a preliminary, the
nature
of the contract has to be understood. Securicor undertook
to provide a service
of periodical visits for a very modest charge
which works out at 26p per visit. It
did not agree to provide
equipment. It would have no knowledge of the value of
6
the
plaintiffs' factory: that, and the efficacy of their fire
precautions, would be
known to the plaintiffs. In these
circumstances nobody could consider it
unreasonable, that as
between these two equal parties the risk assumed by
Securicor
should be a modest one, and that the respondents should carry
the
substantial risk of damage or destruction.
The duty
of Securicor was, as stated, to provide a service. There must
be
implied an obligation to use due care in selecting their
patrolmen, to take care
of the keys and, I would think, to operate
the service with due and proper
regard to the safety and security
of the premises. The breach of duty com-
mitted by Securicor lay
in a failure to discharge this latter obligation. Alterna-
tively
it could be put upon a vicarious responsibility for the wrongful act
of
Musgrove—viz., starting a fire on the premises: Securicor
would be responsible
for this upon the principle stated in Morris
v. Martin [1966] 1 Q.B. 716, 739.
This being the
breach, does condition 1 apply? It is drafted in strong terms,
"In
no circumstances". . . "any injurious act or default by any
employee".
These words have to be approached with the aid of
the cardinal rules of con-
struction that they must be read contra
proferentem and that in order to escape
from the consequences
of one's own wrongdoing, or that of one's servant, clear
words are
necessary. I think that these words are clear. The respondents in
fact
relied upon them for an argument that since they exempted
from negligence
they must be taken as not exempting from the
consequence of deliberate acts.
But this is a perversion of the
rule that if a clause can cover something other
than negligence,
it will not be applied to negligence. Whether, in addition
to
negligence, it covers other, e.g., deliberate, acts, remains a
matter of construction
requiring, of course, clear words. I am of
opinion that it does, and being free to
construe and apply the
clause, I must hold that liability is excluded. On this
part of
the case I agree with the judge and adopt his reasons for judgment.
I
would allow the appeal.
Lord Diplock
my lords,
My noble
and learned friend Lord Wilberforce has summarised the facts
which
have given rise to this appeal. The contract which falls to be
considered
was a contract for the rendering of services by the
defendants ("Securicor") to
the plaintiffs ("the
Factory Owners"). It was a contract of indefinite
duration
terminable by one month's notice on either side. It had
been in existence for
some two-and-a-half years when the breach
that is the subject matter of these
proceedings occurred. It is
not disputed that the act of Securicor's servant,
Musgrove, in
starting a fire in the factory which they had undertaken to
protect
was a breach of contract by Securicor; and since it was
the cause of an event,
the destruction of the factory, that
rendered further performance of the contract
impossible it is not
an unnatural use of ordinary language to describe it as
a
"fundamental breach".
It was by
attaching that label to it that all three members of the Court
of
Appeal found themselves able to dispose of Securicor's defence
based on the
exclusion clause restricting its liability for its
servants' torts in terms which
Lord Wilberforce has already set
out, by holding that where there had been a
fundamental breach by
a party to a contract, there was a rule of law which
prevented him
from relying upon any exclusion clause appearing in the
contract,
whatever its wording might be.
The Court
of Appeal was, I think, bound so to hold by previous decisions of
its
own, of which the first was Harbutt's Plasticine v. Wayne
Tank Co. [1970] 1
Q.B. 44. It purported in that case to find
support for the rule of law it there laid
down in the reasoning of
this House in Suisse Atlantique v. Rotterdamsche
Kolen
Centrale [1967] A.C. 361. I agree with Lord
Wilberforce's analysis of the
7
speeches
in Suisse Atlantique, and with his conclusion that this House
rejected
the argument that there was any such rule of law. I also
agree that Harbutt's
Plasticine and the subsequent cases in
which the so-called "rule of law" was
applied to defeat
exclusion clauses should be overruled, though the actual
decisions
in some of the later cases might have been justified on the
proper
construction of the particular exclusion clause on which
the defendant relied.
My Lords,
the contract in the instant case was entered into before the
passing
of the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977. So what we are
concerned with is the
common law of contract—of which the
subject-matter is the legally enforceable
obligations as between
the parties to it of which the contract is the source. The
"rule
of law" theory which the Court of Appeal has adopted in the last
decade
to defeat exclusion clauses is at first sight attractive in
the simplicity of its logic.
A fundamental breach is one which
entitles the party not in default to elect to
terminate the
contract. Upon his doing so the contract comes to an end.
The
exclusion clause is part of the contract, so it comes to an
end too; the party
in default can no longer rely on it. This
reasoning can be extended without undue
strain to cases where the
party entitled to elect to terminate the contract does not
become
aware of the breach until some time after it occurred; his election
to
terminate the contract could not implausibly be treated as
exercisable nunc pro
tunc. But even the superficial logic
of the reasoning is shattered when it is
applied, as it was in
Wathes (Western) Ltd. v. Austins (Menswear) Ltd. [1976]
1
Lloyd's Rep. 14, to cases where, despite the "fundamental
breach", the party
not in default elects to maintain the
contract in being.
The
fallacy in the reasoning and what I venture to think is the disarray
into
which the common law about breaches of contract has fallen,
is due to the use
in many of the leading judgments on this subject
of ambiguous or imprecise
expressions without defining the sense
in which they are used. I am conscious
that I have myself
sometimes been guilty of this when I look back on judgments
I have
given in such cases as Hong Kong Fir Shipping Co. Ltd. v.
Kawakasi Kisen
Kaisha Ltd. [1962] 2 QB 26; Ward v.
Bignall [1967] 1 Q.B. 534; Moschi v. Lep
Air
Services [1973] A.C. 331; and in particular Hardwick Game Farm
v.
S.A.P.P.A. [1966] 1 W.L.R. 287, when commenting
unfavourably on the then
budding doctrine of fundamental breach in
a portion of my judgment in the
Court of Appeal that did not
subsequently incur the disapproval of this House.
My Lords,
it is characteristic of commercial contracts, nearly all of
which
to-day are entered into not by natural legal persons, but by
fictitious ones, i.e.
companies, that the parties promise to one
another that some thing will be done;
for instance, that property
and possession of goods will be transferred, that goods
will be
carried by ship from one port to another, that a building will be
con-
structed in accordance with agreed plans, that services of a
particular kind will
be provided. Such a contract is the source of
primary legal obligations upon
each party to it to procure that
whatever he has promised will be done, is done.
[I leave aside
arbitration clauses which do not come into operation until a party
to
the contract claims that a primary obligation has not been proved.]
Where what
is promised will be done involves the doing of a physical
act,
performance of the promise necessitates procuring a natural
person to do it; but
the legal relationship between the promisor
and the natural person by whom the
act is done, whether it is that
of master and servant, or principal and agent, or of
parties to an
independent sub-contract, is generally irrelevant. If that
person
fails to do it in the manner in which the promisor has
promised to procure it to
be done, as, for instance, with
reasonable skill and care, the promisor has failed
to fulfil his
own primary obligation. This is to be distinguished from
"vicarious
liability"—a legal concept which does
depend upon the existence of a particular
legal relationship
between the natural person by whom a tortious act was done
and the
person sought to be made vicariously liable for it. In the interests
of
clarity the expression should, in my view, be confined to
liability for tort.
A basic
principle of the common law of contract, to which there are no
excep-
tions that are relevant in the instant case, is that
parties to a contract are free to
determine for themselves what
primary obligations they will accept. They may
8
state
these in express words in the contract itself and, where they do, the
state-
ment is determinative; but in practice a commercial
contract never states all the
primary obligations of the parties
in full; many are left to be incorporated by
implication of law
from the legal nature of the contract into which the parties
are
entering. But if the parties wish to reject or modify primary
obligations
which would otherwise be so incorporated, they are
fully at liberty to do so by
express words.
Leaving
aside those comparatively rare cases in which the court is able
to
enforce a primary obligation by decreeing specific performance
of it, breaches
of primary obligations give rise to substituted or
secondary obligations on the
part of the party in default, and, in
some cases, may entitle the other party to be
relieved from
further performance of his own primary obligations. These
secondary
obligations of the contract breaker and any concomitant relief of
the
other party from his own primary obligations also arise by
implication of law—
generally common law, but sometimes
statute, as in the case of codifying
Statutes passed at the turn
of the century, notably the Sale of Goods Act 1893.
The contract,
however, is just as much the source of secondary obligations as it
is
of primary obligations; and like primary obligations that are implied
by law,
secondary obligations too can be modified by agreement
between the parties,
although, for reasons to be mentioned later,
they cannot, in my view, be totally
excluded. In the instant case,
the only secondary obligations and concomitant
reliefs that are
applicable arise by implication of the common law as modified
by
the express words of the contract.
Every
failure to perform a primary obligation is a breach of contract.
The
secondary obligation on the part of the contract breaker to
which it gives rise
by implication of the common law is to pay
monetary compensation to the
other party for the loss sustained by
him in consequence of the breach; but,
with two exceptions, the
primary obligations of both parties so far as they have
not yet
been fully performed remain unchanged. This secondary obligation
to
pay compensation (damages) for non-performance of primary
obligations I will
call the "general secondary obligation".
It applies in the cases of the two
exceptions as well.
The exceptions are:
Where the
event resulting from the failure by one party to perform a
primary
obligation has the effect of depriving the other party of
substantially
the whole benefit which it was the intention of the
parties that he should
obtain from the contract, the party not in
default may elect to put an end
to all primary obligations of
both parties remaining unperformed. (If the
expression
"fundamental breach" is to be retained, it should, in
the
interests of clarity, be confined to this exception).
Where the
contracting parties have agreed, whether by express words or
by
implication of law, that any failure by one party to
perform a particular
primary obligation ("condition" in
the nomenclature of the Sale of Goods
Act 1893), irrespective of
the gravity of the event that has in fact resulted
from the
breach, shall entitle the other party to elect to put an end to
all
primary obligation of both parties remaining unperformed. (In
the interests
of clarity, the nomenclature of the Sale of Goods
Act 1893, "breach of
"condition" should be
reserved for this exception.)
Where such
an election is made (a) there is substituted by implication of
law
for the primary obligations of the party in default which
remain unperformed a
secondary obligation to pay monetary
compensation to the other party for the
loss sustained by him in
consequence of their non-performance in the future and
(b) the
unperformed primary obligations of that other party are discharged.
This
secondary obligation is additional to the general secondary
obligation; I will
call it "the anticipatory secondary
obligation".
In cases
falling within the first exception, fundamental breach, the
anticipatory
secondary obligation arises under contracts of all
kinds by implication of the
common law, except to the extent that
it is excluded or modified by the express
9
words of
the contract. In cases falling within the second exception, breach
of
condition, the anticipatory secondary obligation generally arises
under
particular kinds of contracts by implication of statute law;
though in the case
of "deviation" from the contract
voyage under a contract of carriage of goods
by sea it arises by
implication of the common law. The anticipatory
secondary
obligation in these cases too can be excluded or
modified by express words.
When there
has been a fundamental breach or breach of condition, the coming
to
an end of the primary obligations of both parties to the contract at
the election
of the party not in default, is often referred to as
the "determination" or
"rescission" of the
contract or, as in the Sale of Goods Act 1893 "treating
the
"contract as repudiated". The first two of these
expressions, however, are mis-
leading unless it is borne in mind
that for the unperformed primary obligations
of the party in
default there are substituted by operation of law what I have
called
the secondary obligations.
The
bringing to an end of all primary obligations under the contract may
also
leave the parties in a relationship, typically that of bailor
and bailee, in which
they owe to one another by operation of law
fresh primary obligations of which
the contract is not the source;
but no such relationship is involved in the instant
case.
I have
left out of account in this analysis as irrelevant to the instant
case an
arbitration or choice of forum clause. This does not come
into operation until
a party to the contract claims that a primary
obligation of the other party has
not been performed; and its
relationship to other obligations of which the
contract is the
source was dealt with by this House in Heyman v. Darwins
Ltd.
[1942] A.C. 356.
My Lords,
an exclusion clause is one which excludes or modifies an
obligation,
whether primary, general secondary or anticipatory
secondary, that would
otherwise arise under the contract by
implication of law. Parties are free to agree
to whatever
exclusion or modification of all three types of obligations as
they
please within the limits that the agreement must retain the
legal characteristics
of a contract; and must not offend against
the equitable rule against penalties;
that is to say, it must not
impose upon the breaker of a primary obligation a
general second
obligation to pay to the other party a sum of money that
is
manifestly intended to be in excess of the amount which would
fully compensate
the other party for the loss sustained by him in
consequence of the breach of the
primary obligation. Since the
presumption is that the parties by entering into
the contract
intended to accept the implied obligations exclusion clauses are
to
be construed strictly and the degree of strictness appropriate
to be applied to
their construction may properly depend upon the
extent to which they involve
departure from the implied
obligations. Since the obligations implied by law in a
commercial
contract are those which, by judicial consensus over the years or
by
Parliament in passing a statute, have been regarded as
obligations which a
reasonable businessman would realise that he
was accepting when he entered
into a contract of a particular
kind, the court's view of the reasonableness of any
departure from
the implied obligations which would be involved in construing
the
express words of an exclusion clause in one sense that they are
capable of
bearing rather than another, is a relevant
consideration in deciding what mean-
ing the words were intended
by the parties to bear. But this does not entitle the
court to
reject the exclusion clause, however unreasonable the court itself
may
think it is, if the words are clear and fairly susceptible of
one meaning only.
My Lords,
the reports are full of cases in which what would appear to be
very
strained constructions have been placed upon exclusion
clauses, mainly in what
to-day would be called consumer contracts
and contracts of adhesion. As Lord
Wilberforce has pointed out,
any need for this kind of judicial distortion of the
English
language has been banished by Parliament's having made these kinds
of
contracts subject to the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977. In
commercial
contracts negotiated between business-men capable of
looking after their own
interests and of deciding how risks
inherent in the performance of various kinds
of contract can be
most economically borne (generally by insurance), it is, in my
10
view,
wrong to place a strained construction upon words in an exclusion
clause
which are clear and fairly susceptible of one meaning only
even after due
allowance has been made for the presumption in
favour of the implied primary
and secondary obligations.
Applying
these principles to the instant case; in the absence of the
exclusion
clause which Lord Wilberforce has cited, a primary
obligation of Securicor under
the contract, which would be implied
by law, would be an absolute obligation
to procure that the visits
by the night patrol to the factory were conducted by
natural
persons who would exercise reasonable skill and care for the
safety
of the factory. That primary obligation is modified by the
exclusion clause.
Securicor's obligation to do this is not to be
absolute, but is limited to exercising
due diligence in its
capacity as employer of the natural persons by whom the
visits are
conducted, to procure that those persons shall exercise
reasonable
skill and care for the safety of the factory.
For the
reasons given by Lord Wilberforce it seems to me that this
apportion-
ment of the risk of the factory being damaged or
destroyed by the injurious
act of an employee of Securicor while
carrying out a visit to the factory is one
which reasonable
business-men in the position of Securicor and the Factory
Owners
might well think was the most economical. An analogous
apportionment
of risk is provided for by the Hague Rules in the
case of goods carried by sea
under bills of lading. The risk that
a servant of Securicor would damage or
destroy the factory or
steal goods from it, despite the exercise of all reasonable
diligence
by Securicor to prevent it, is what in the context of maritime law
would
be called a "misfortune risk"—something
which reasonable diligence of neither
party to the contract can
prevent. Either party can insure against it. It is generally
more
economical for the person by whom the loss will be directly
sustained
to do so rather than that it should be covered by the
other party by liability
insurance. This makes it unnecessary to
consider whether a later exclusion
clause in the contract which
modifies the general secondary obligation implied
by law by
placing limits on the amount of damages recoverable for breaches
of
primary obligations, would have applied in the instant case.
For the
reasons given by Lord Wilberforce and in application of the
principles
that I have here stated, I would allow this appeal.
Lord Salmon
MY LORDS,
The
contract with which this appeal is concerned is a very simple
commercial
contract entered into by two highly experienced
business enterprises—the
appellants whom I shall call
Securicor and the respondents whom I shall call
Photo Productions.
This
appeal turns in my view entirely upon certain words in the
contract
which read as follows :—
"Under
no circumstances shall [Securicor] be responsible for any
injurious
"act or default by any employee of [Securicor]
unless such act or default
"could have been foreseen and
avoided by the exercise of due diligence on
"the part of
[Securicor] as his employer."
We are not
concerned with the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 since the
present
contract was entered into before that Act was passed. Accordingly,
I
prefer to express no view about the effect of that Act as the
result of this appeal
depends solely on the common law.
The facts
relevant to this case are very short. Indubitably, one of
Securicor's
servants called Musgrove committed an injurious act or
default which caused
Photo Productions' factory to be burned down;
and as a result, Photo
11
Productions'
suffered a loss of £615,000. This disaster occurred when
Musgrove
was visiting the factory on patrol one Sunday night and
deliberately threw a
lighted match on some cartons lying on the
floor of one of the rooms he was
inspecting. Whether Musgrove
intended to light only a small fire or to burn
down the factory,
and what his motives were for what he did were found by the
learned
trial judge to be mysteries which it was impossible to solve.
No-one has
suggested that Securicor could have foreseen or avoided by
due
diligence the act or default which caused the damage or that
Securicor had been
negligent in employing or supervising Musgrove.
The
contract between the two parties provided that Securicor should
supply a
patrol service at Photo Productions' factory by four
visits a night for seven
nights a week and two visits every
Saturday afternoon and four day visits every
Sunday. The contract
provided that for this service, Securicor should be paid
£8.15
a week. There can be no doubt that but for the clause in the
contract
which I have recited, Securicor would have been liable
for the damage which was
caused by their servant, Musgrove, whilst
indubitably acting in the course of his
employment: Morris v.
Martin [1966] 1 Q.B. 716. To my mind, however, the
words of
the clause are so crystal clear that they obviously relieve Securicor
from
what would otherwise have been their liability for the damage
caused by
Musgrove. Indeed the words of the clause are incapable
of any other meaning.
I think that any business man entering into
this contract could have had no
doubt as to the real meaning of
this clause and would have made his insurance
arrangements
accordingly. The cost to Photo Productions for the benefit of
the
patrol service provided by Securicor was very modest and
probably substantially
less than the reduction of the insurance
premiums which Photo Productions
may have enjoyed as a result of
obtaining that service.
Clauses
which absolve a party to a contract from liability for breaking it
are
no doubt unpopular—particularly when they are unfair,
which incidentally, in
my view, this clause is not. It is, I
think, because of the unpopularity of such
clauses that a so
called "rule of law" has been developed in the Court of
Appeal
to the effect that what was characterised as "a
fundamental breach of contract",
automatically or with the
consent of the innocent party, brings the contract to
an end; and
that therefore the contract breaker will then immediately be
barred
from relying on any clause in the contract, however clearly
worded, which would
otherwise have safeguarded him against being
liable inter alia in respect of the
damages caused by the
default; see for example Karsales (Harrow) Ltd. v.
Wallis
[1956] 1 W.L.R. per Denning L.J. at p.946 and Harbutt's
"Plasticine"
Ltd. v. Wayne Tank and Pump Co. Ltd.
[1970] 1 Q.B. 447.
I entirely
agree with my noble and learned friend Lord Wilberforce's analysis
of
the Suisse Atlantique case which explains why the breach does
not bring
the contract to an end and why the so-called "rule
of law" upon which Photo
Productions rely is therefore
non-existent. This proposition is strongly sup-
ported by the
passage recited by Lord Wilberforce in Lord Porter's speech in
Heyman
v. Darwins Ltd. [1942] A.C. 356 at p.399.
Any
persons capable of making a contract are free to enter into any
contract
they may choose: and providing the contract is not
illegal or voidable, it is
binding upon them. It is not denied
that the present contract was binding upon
each of the parties to
it. In the end, everything depends upon the true con-
struction of
the clause in dispute about which I have already expressed
my
opinion.
My Lords, I would accordingly allow the appeal.
Lord Keith of Kinkel
MY LORDS,
I agree
with the speech of my noble and learned friend Lord
Wilberforce,
which I have had the advantage of reading in draft
and to which I cannot
usefully add anything.
Accordingly I too would allow the appeal.
12
Lord Scarman
MY LORDS,
I have had
the advantage of reading in draft the speech delivered by my
noble
and learned friend Lord Wilberforce. I agree with it. I
would, therefore, allow
the appeal.
I applaud
the refusal of the trial judge, MacKenna J., to allow the
sophisti-
cated refinements into which, before the enactment of
the Unfair Contract
Terms Act 1977, the courts were driven in
order to do justice to the consumer
to govern his judgment in a
commercial dispute between parties well able to
look after
themselves. In such a situation what the parties agreed (expressly
or
impliedly) is what matters; and the duty of the courts is to
construe their
contract according to its tenor.
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