Invitation To Offer
Invitation To Offer
Invitation To Offer
A supply of information is a statement that merely provides information for the other
party and is not intended to be acted upon.
Harvey v Facey
Facts:
Harvey sent a telegraph enquiring, "will you sell us Bumer Hall Pen? telegraph lowest
cash price". Facey replied, "lowest price for Bumper Hall Pen 900" to which Harvey
replied, "we agree to buy Bumper Hall Pen for the sum of 900 asked by you".
Held:
The Privy Council held that there was no contract concluded between the parties. Facey
had not directly answered the first question as to whether they would sell and the lowest
price stated was merely responding to a request for information not an offer. There was
thus no evidence of an intention that the telegram sent by Facey was to be an offer.2
1. Display of goods
Displays of priced goods are not offers; they are only invitations to treat. An offer is
1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invitation_to_treat
2 http://www.e-lawresources.co.uk/Harvey-v-Facey.php
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created when the customer presents the item to the cashier together with payment.
Acceptance occurs at the point the cashier takes payment.3
Fisher v Bell [1961]
Facts:
The defendant had a flick knife displayed in his shop window with a price tag on it.
Statute made it a criminal offence to 'offer' such flick knives for sale.
Held:
Its was held that it is not illegal. A product displayed in a shop is an invitation to treat
only and therefore has no contractual significance in the shopping process.
Held:
Goods on the shelf constitute an invitation to treat not an offer. A customer takes the
goods to the till and makes an offer to purchase. The shop assistant then chooses whether
to accept the offer. The contract is therefore concluded at the till in the presence of a
pharmacist
2. Advertisements
An advertisement can define as a promotion of goods and services publicly.
Advertisement can either be an offer or invitation to treat. Whether an advertisement is an
offer or an invitation to treat, it is based on the intention of the parties in each case.
3 http://www.academia.edu/6894944/Invitation_to_treat
3
However, most of the advertisements are invitation to treat.4 the basic purpose of
advertisements are to make people aware that these goods are available for sales or in
other words an advertisement is an attempt to receive offer (s).
An advertisement of bilateral contract is an invitation to treat but no offer as in the case of
Partridge v Crittenden.
Held:
The defendant's conviction was quashed. The advert was an invitation to treat not an
offer. The literal rule of statutory interpretation was applied.
Facts:
A Newspaper advert placed by the defendant stated:-
£100 reward will be paid by the Carbolic Smoke Ball Company to any person who
contracts the influenza after having used the ball three times daily for two weeks
according to the printed directions supplied with each ball...
£1000 is deposited with the Alliance Bank, shewing our sincerity in the matter."
4https://www.lawteacher.net/free-law-essays/contract-law/display-of-goods-and-
advertisement-contract-law-essay.php
4
Mrs Carlill purchased some smoke balls and used them according to the directions and
caught flu. She sought to claim the stated £100 reward.
Held:
The Court of Appeal held that Mrs Carlill was entitled to the reward as the advert
constituted an offer of a unilateral contract which she had accepted by performing the
conditions stated in the offer. The court rejected all the arguments put forward by the
defendants.
Held
Lefkowitz was awarded $138.50 for damages. Store appealed and lost. The court held that
the advertisement constitute an offer, and plaintiff’s actions show an acceptance. The
offer was clear, definite and explicit. It left nothing open for negotiation, it constitutes an
offer. No restrictions for only women in advertisement, “has the right at anytime before
acceptance to modify his offer, he does not have the right, after acceptance, to impose
new or arbitrary conditions not contained in the published offer.
3. Auctions
Where an auction takes place with reserve, the bid itself is an offer by the bidder which
can either be accepted or rejected by the event organizer (auctioneer). Not only this but
the offer made can be withdrawn any time before the acceptance by the auctioneer.
Harris v Nickerson
Facts:
The defendant advertised that an auction of certain goods would take place at a stated
time and place. The plaintiff travelled to the auction only to find that items that he was
5
interested in had been withdrawn. He claimed compensation for breach of contract,
arguing that the advertisement constituted an offer, and his travelling to the auction, an
acceptance by conduct.
Held:
The advertisement was not an offer, merely a declaration of intention.
Barry v Davies
Facts:
The auctioneer withdrew goods from an auction (the goods had no reserve price) when
a bona fide bid of £200 was effective. The court held that an auctioneer is bound to sell to
the highest bidder where there is no reserve price, and can't withdraw the sale simply
because the price is too low. A bid in an auction, the possibility of acceptance of the bid,
unless the bid is withdrawn, and the benefit to the auctioneer of driving up the price bid is
sufficient consideration. The contract in an auction is between the buyer and the seller,
not the buyer and the auctioneer, although the buyer has a collateral agreement with the
auctioneer.
Held:
The remedy is the difference between the contract value, and the current market value of
the goods under the Sale of Goods Act 1979 s51(3). The value in this case was £27,600.5
4. Tenders
A tender is an estimate given in response to a request. An invitation for tenders is an
invitation to treat - it is not an offer to use the person quoting the
lowest price.
5 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_v_Davies
6
Held
Such a referential bid could not be allowed. As the defendants were bound to accept the
highest bid, the referential bid did not have a fixed amount attached to it and as such
could not be accepted or even submitted.
Held:
The condition covered the case.The plaintiff further contended that the pass constituted a
contract of conveyance and that the condition there was rendered void by s.97 of the Road
6 http://e-lawresources.co.uk/Offer-and-acceptance-contract.php
7
Traffic Act, 1930(20 &21 Geo. 5, c. 43). Held, the pass was merely a revocable licence
without contractual effect and s.97 of the Road Traffic Act, 1930, did not apply there.7
Facts:
The claimant was injured in a car park partly due to the defendant's negligence. The
claimant was given a ticket on entering the car park after putting money into a machine.
The ticket stated the contract of parking was subject to terms and conditions which were
displayed on the inside of the car park. One of the terms excluded liability for personal
injuries arising through negligence. The question for the court was whether the term was
incorporated into the contract ie had the defendant brought it to the attention of the
claimant before or at the time the contract was made. This question depended upon where
the offer and acceptance took place in relation to the machine.
Held:
The machine itself constituted the offer. The acceptance was by putting the money into
the machine. The ticket was dispensed after the acceptance took place and therefore the
clause was not incorporated into the contract.
Bibliography
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invitation_to_treat
http://www.e-lawresources.co.uk/Harvey-v-Facey.php
7https://www.scribd.com/doc/190674297/Wilkie-v-London-Passenger-Transport-Board-Case-
Digest
8
http://www.academia.edu/6894944/Invitation_to_treat
https://www.lawteacher.net/free-law-essays/contract-law/display-of-goods-and-
advertisement-contract-law-essay.php
http://www.e-lawresources.co.uk/Fisher-v-Bell.php
https://webstroke.co.uk/law/cases/fisher-v-bell-1961
http://www.e-lawresources.co.uk/Pharmaceutical-Society-of-Great-Britain-v-Boots.php
http://casebrief.me/casebriefs/pharmaceutical-society-of-gb-v-boots-cash/
http://www.e-lawresources.co.uk/Partridge-v-Crittenden.php
http://casebrief.me/casebriefs/partridge-v-crittenden/
http://www.e-lawresources.co.uk/Carlill-v-Carbolic-Smoke-Ball-Co.php
http://www.casebriefsummary.com/lefkowitz-v-great-minneapolis-surplus-store/
http://netk.net.au/Contract/Harris.asp
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_v_Davies
https://webstroke.co.uk/law/cases/barry-v-davies-2001
https://webstroke.co.uk/law/cases/harvela-investments-v-royal-trust-of-canada-1985
https://www.australiancontractlaw.com/cases/blackpool.html
https://www.scribd.com/doc/190674297/Wilkie-v-London-Passenger-Transport-Board-
Case-Digest
http://www.e-lawresources.co.uk/Thornton-v-Shoe-Lane-Parking.php