LCN 301 Exam Notes 2023
LCN 301 Exam Notes 2023
LCN 301 Exam Notes 2023
It is an agreement entered into by two or more persons with the intention of creating a
legally binding obligation or obligations that can be enforced by law. To constitute an
enforceable contract, an agreement must be one which the law recognizes as binding
on the parties.
The extra ingredient that distinguishes contracts from non-binding agreements is a
serious intention to create legally enforceable obligations (animus contrahendi).
The absence of an animus contrahendi explains why ‘gentlemen’s agreements’ are
not enforceable as contracts (binding on their honour only).
The characteristic features of a contract
- A contract is a juristic act – that is an act to which the law attaches the consequences
intended by the parties.
- There must be two or more parties involved and our law does not recognize a
unilateral promise (pollicitatio) as binding.
- A contract entails promises or undertakings on one or both sides. The undertaking
may be to make a certain performance, immediately or at a future date: to give
something (dare); to do something (facere); or to refrain from doing something (non
facere).
- may be an undertaking that a certain state of affairs exists, or has existed (for
example, that the car is a 2019 model, and that it has been serviced regularly); this is
known as a warranty
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• possibility – the obligations undertaken must be capable of performance when the
agreement is entered into; and
certainty – the agreement must have a definite or determinable content, so that the
obligations can be ascertained and enforced.
An obligation is a legal bond (vinculum iuris) between two or more persons, obliging the one (the
debtor) to give, do, or refrain from doing something to or for the other (the creditor). As such, an
obligation comprises a right and a corresponding duty: the right of the creditor to demand a
performance by the debtor; and the duty of the debtor to make that performance
Rights created by obligation is a personal right (ius in personam). If the obligation is enforceable
by action in a court of law, it is referred to as a civil obligation.
Primary sources of obligations are contract and delict. Other sources include undue enrichment,
family relationships, negotiorum gestio (unauthorized administration of another’s affiars), wills
and statutes.
A distinction is made between civil obligations (obligatio civilis) and natural obligations (obligatio
naturalis).
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Civil obligation may be enforced directly by recourse to a court of law, whereas a natural
obligation may not.
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However, a natural obligation does have some legal effect: it is a legal relationship as opposed to a
merely moral relationship, and just as in the case of a civil obligation, it can be validly discharged,
is capable of indirect enforcement by way of set-off, and can serve as the basis of an accessory
contract such as suretyship.
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An example of a natural obligation is a contractual obligation that requires a minor who acted
without the necessary consent, to perform something, or an obligation which requires the payment
of a wagering or gambling debt.
**a natural obligation is unenforceable.
The fact that a contract is valid when it was concluded, however, does not mean that it cannot be
challenged subsequently.
The contract may for example, be terminated because the performance has become impossible or
illegal; or one of the contracting parties may cancel because of the other’s breach of contract; or one
of the parties may cancel the contract because of the other’s misrepresentation, duress or undue
influence.
A material mistake will have the result that a contract is void (that is no contract comes into
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existence) since it excludes the basic requirement for the existence of a contract, namely consent. A
void contract creates no obligations.
Misrepresentation, duress or undue influence, can only render a contract voidable, because in such a
case there is consensus, so that the contract cannot be void, but the consent has been obtained in an
improper manner, rendering the contract voidable.
A contract which is merely voidable does create obligations, and these obligations then exist until
the contracting party who has the election (choice) decides to terminate them. He is not, however,
obliged to terminate them and if he does not, the obligations continue to exist unaffected.
The main features of classical doctrine are that parties have the utmost freedom in
engaging in contractual relations with others (freedom of contract), but, once freely
entered into and if not contrary to public policy, a contract should be enforced by a
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court of law to the hilt, irrespective of patent unfairness to one of the parties [Printing &
Numerical Registering Co v Sampson (1875)]. The idea was that the exchange was
inherently fair, since it was the product of negotiation between parties with equal
bargaining power
In modern law, it has become increasingly obvious that the assumed fairness of the
exchange and the equality of the parties are simply mythical, and that absolute freedom
of contract simply does not exist.
Perhaps, where large corporate entities contract with each other, the classical notions
apply, but far less so when private individuals are involved. Consumers, for instance,
often have very little leverage when entering into contracts: a person can usually
bargain for a better price at a retail store but not when entering into contracts for
essential services, such as electricity or water provision. So, although still relevant in
modern law, freedom of contract is not an absolute value.
Good Faith and Equity in contract – the idea that parties to a contract should
behave honestly and fairly in their dealings with one another, showing a minimum
level of respect for the interests of the other party (a concept embraced by the African
notion of ubuntu); and privity of contract – the idea that a contract creates rights
and duties only for the parties to the agreement, and not for third persons.
The concept of good faith, or bona fides, has deep roots in our legal system. While acknowledging
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the relevance of these concepts, the Supreme Court of Appeal has frequently emphasised that a
contract will not be struck down merely because it is unfair or contrary to good faith. There must
be more tangible indications of harm to public interest before a contract freely entered into will not
be enforced.
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Seeing that Shoprite was opposed to the renewal of the lease on its expiry, Everfresh
remained in occupation of the premises. It alleged that it had unilaterally but validly
renewed the lease in terms of clause 3. Everfresh alternatively alleged that Shoprite
had no right to evict it, because clause 3 obliged Shoprite to make efforts in good
faith to reach an agreement on rental. Subsequently, Shoprite sought and obtained an
eviction order against Everfresh in the Kwa-Zulu Natal High Court, Pietermaritzburg
(High Court). The High Court held that an option to renew a lease on terms to be
agreed is unenforceable. The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) agreed with the High
Court and dismissed Everfresh’s application for leave to appeal.
Before the Constitutional Court Everfresh argued that the common law of contract
must be infused with constitutional values, to provide for greater recognition of the
concept of good faith. The question was whether this can be done in circumstances
where this issue was directly raised in neither the High Court nor the SCA, but for the
first time before the Court.
Majority judgment: acknowledged the importance of mixing of constitutional values
into contract law. However, it was concluded that it was not in the interests of justice
to entertain the appeal and that Everfresh had not advanced any grounds why it would
be in the interests of justice for the Court to decide the appeal as the court of first
instance. Held that Shoprite was not warned of the case it had to meet and the relief
sought against it, nor was the Court afforded the benefit of the views of the High
Court and the SCA which would help shape the common law and customary law in
line with the normative grid of the Constitution.
Thus the Constitutional Court dismissed the application for leave to appeal with costs.
The Court refused to set aside the order of eviction and to remit the matter back to the
High Court for re-hearing. (Minority judgment held: the mixing of the values of the
Bill of Rights into contract law is of a sizeable significance, and that the High Court
was obliged to develop the common law in the light of the factual dispute before it,
and that it is appropriate to refer the matter back to the High Court to consider
whether to develop the common law).
4. AMINUS CONTRAHENDI
The embodies the serious intention to create legally enforceable obligations in the
contract. (it can be contested in court)
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6. IMPROPER OBTAINED CONSENSUS AND ITS REQUIREMENTS;
MISREPRESENTATIONS (WARRANTIES; PUFFS AND DICTA ET
PROMISA), DURESS AND UNDUE INFLUENCE – MARENSKY VS
MORKEL
- The one contractant has obtained the other’s consent to the contract as a whole
or it specific terms in an improper manner like by inducing the other party to
contract by way of a misrepresentation.
- The traditional grounds for rescission – misrep, duress and undue influence –
would then be examples of a general ground for rescission.
- A further consequence of the recognition of a general ground for rescission is
that the grounds for rescission in specific cases could readily be extended and
not be limited to the existing 3.
Commercial Bribery:
In Plaaslike Boeredienste v Chemfos, the Appellate Division went beyond the
existing grounds for rescission in considering a claim for rescission of a contract.
Here, the contractant had bribed the agent of the other contractant to persuade the
latter to conclude a contract. Although fraud (intentional misrep) was advanced as the
ground for rescission, the court held that the act of persuasion through bribery did not
constitute fraud as such but amounted to an improper means of obtaining consensus.
According to authors, the approach adopted by the court indicates that the AD seems
to have restarted the grounds for rescission in terms of the underlying general
principle that a contract may be rescinded by a contractant whose consent to it was
obtained by improper means. This raises the possibility that the traditional grounds
for rescission may be called one general ground.
In Extel v Crown Mills, the SCA was confronted with a contract engineered by the
bribery of the principal’s agent by the other contracting party. The court, approving
the Chemfos decision held that in such cases of commercial bribery the agreement
between the briber and the person bribed is void for want of legality, while the
ensuing agreement between the briber and the innocent contracting party is voidable
at the instance of the innocent party.
The court did not however find that the existing grounds for the rescission of a
contract in this context have been included under one general ground. The court
confirmed that commercial bribery is a distinct ground for rescinding a contract and
that it has the following elements:
1. A reward
2. paid / promised
3. by one party – the briber
4. to another – the agent
5. who is able to exert influence over
6. a third party
7. with the intention that the agent
8. should induce the principal
9. without the latter’s knowledge and
10. for the direct or indirect benefit of the briber
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11. to enter into or maintain / alter a contractual relationship
12. with the briber / his principal /associate / subordinate.
6.1 MISREPRESENTATION
Where a person enters into a contract on the strength of a misrepresentation made by
him or her, or as a result of duress or undue influence exerted upon him or her by the
other party, the agreement is none the less real for having been induced by such
means. There is no lack of consensus, since the parties know precisely with whom
and on what terms they are contracting. The agreement is accordingly a valid one.
However, obtained by improper means, the contract is voidable.
Restitutio in integrum
The remedy of rescission coupled with restitution is known as restitutio in integrum.
It has become the remedy used to set aside a contract that is voidable on any of a
number of grounds. There is no need to approach a court for an order of cancellation;
an extra-judicial repudiation will suffice. Where the right to rescind is disputed, it is
desirable to obtain a court order confirming the cancellation, since third parties may
act on the assumption that the contract still exists.
Delictual damages
The conduct of the party who induced the contract by improper means will frequently
constitute a delict. Where this is the case, the innocent party may recover damages in
respect of any financial loss that he or she has suffered as a result of the delict,
irrespective of whether he or she elects to affirm or to rescind the contract. In spite of
the contractual context, the damages are delictual (action legis Aquiliae).
The damages are measured according to the innocent party’s negative interest; they
aim to place him or her in the financial position he or she would have occupied had
the delict not been committed, which in the present context usually means the
position prior to contracting.
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A fraudulent misrepresentation is one made
• Knowingly, or
• Without belief in its truth, or
• Recklessly, careless whether it should prove to be true or false.
It is one made without an honest belief in its truth.
A negligent misrepresentation is one made honestly, but carelessly.
An innocent misrepresentation is one made without fraud or negligence.
6.2.2 WARRANTIES
When a statement of fact is made during the course of pre-contractual bargaining, or
is embodied in a contractual document (eg: ‘the car is a 1985 model’), it is often a
nice question whether the statement is a mere representation, or a warranty – that is a
term of contract. Test for distinguishing warranties from representations focuses on
the intention of the parties: did they intend the statement to form part of their contract;
in other words, that there should be a contractual liability in respect of it?
In determining the intention of the parties, the court is guided by objective criteria
such as: the importance of the truth of the statement; the stage of the transaction at
which it was made; and whether it was made in response to a query by the
representee.
Even in the absence of a genuine animus contrahendi, a person may be held to have
given a warranty, on the basis of estoppels or the principle in Smith v Hughes, if he or
she led the other part reasonably to believe that he or she was warranting the truth of
his or her statement.
A warranty is a term, its breach gives rise to the usual remedies for breach of contract
(cancellation of the contract (where the breach is material) and damages). (Positive
interest)
(If misrepresentation made prior to the conclusion of the contract is subsequently
incorporated into it as a contractual term, the representee may sue either for
misrepresentation or for breach of contract.) Opinions, statements as to the future and
statements of law
Mere expressions of opinion, usually amount to misrepresentations. However, if the
speaker does not in fact hold the belief or opinion which he or she expresses, or lacks
the will to give effect to his or her statement of intention when he or she makes it, he
or she misrepresents his or her own state of mind; and for this he or she may be held
liable. A statement of law has traditionally been considered to be one of opinion,
rather than fact, and therefore not actionable. A statement as to the legal effect of a
document is one of law; but where a party induces another to enter into a contract by
representing that he or she places a particular construction upon a clause in the
document, he or she will be bound by that construction, even if it is not the legally
correct one.
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Mere general (puffery) by a contracting party does not amount to misrepresentation.
The party is ‘merely singing the praises of his wares’. However, if the statement goes
beyond loose praise and commendation, so that the exaggeration or puffing, it may
well entail liability.
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Intention to induce: misrepresentation should be made with the intention of
inducing the other party to enter into the contract. If the unreasonable reliance
by the representee was reasonably foreseeable to the represent or, rescission
should be permitted.
Materiality: Materiality, the misrepresentation must be material in order to
afford a right to rescind. The misrepresentation should be of such a nature that
is would have the natural and probable effect of inducing a reasonable person
to enter into the contract.
Fault not required. The right to rescind a contract induced by
misrepresentation exists irrespective of whether the statement was made
fraudulently, negligently or innocently.
Misrepresentation as a defence
Misrepresentation may constitute an invalidating cause no less than a cause of action:
whenever a representee may rescind a contract for misrepresentation, he or she may
also use the misrepresentation as a defence to an action on the contract brought
against him or her by the representor.
Damages
Whether the representee chooses to cancel or to abide by the contract, he or she may
in addition be entitled to recover damages in respect of any patrimonial loss caused
by the misrepresentation.
The motive of the representor is irrelevant; provded only that he or she made the
assertion without an honest belief in its truth and intended it to be acted upon, it
matters not that he or she lacked an intention to cause loss or damage to the
representee; but such damage must have followed as a result of the representee acting
upon the misrepresentation.
Such intention need not always be dolus directus – that is, the representor need not
have applied his or her will to induce the representee to act upon the representation. It
is sufficient if he or she subjectively forsaw such a result and was reckless as to
whether the result followed or not.
The right to claim damages for fraud is not dependant on the materiality of the
representation; it is no defence that the representee should not, as a reasonable person.
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Since fraud is delict, the measure of damages is the usual delictual rather than the
contractual measure. (Trotman v Edwick)
The victim of fraudulent misrepresentation is thus entitled to be put in the financial
position he or she would have occupied had the representation not been made to him
or her, but he or she cannot have the representation ‘made good’ by being put in the
position he or she would have occupied had the representation been true.
Whether the contract is rescinded or upheld, damages are recoverable in respect of the
consequential losses flowing from the fraud. Where the contract is rescinded and
restitution ordered, the representee’s loss on the transaction itself is generally wiped
out by the process of restitution and his or her damages are thus usually limited to
wasted costs and other such consequential losses. Where the contract is upheld, the
representee may suffer a loss on the transaction itself.
To be compensable, the loss in question must be casually connected with the fraud.
In a case of dolus dans, there would have been no contract at all but for the fraud.
This entails awarding the innocent party the value of his or her performance, less any
benefits which he or she has received from the other party under the contract. In a
case of sale, for example, his or her net loss is the price paid for the merx, less its
actual or fair value at the time of purchase. Both losses and benefits have to be taken
into account, since both flow directly from the misrepresentation; thus if, in spite of
the misrepresentation, the representee has made an overall profit on the transaction,
he or she is not entitled to any damages – the so-called swings-and-roundabouts
principle (Ranger).
Eg: If he or she paid R800 000 for a house worth R900 000, and he or she would not
have brought at all but for a misrepresentation that the house had recently been
rewired, he or she cannot recover the R20 000 that it has cost to rewire the house,
since what he or she loses on the swings (R20 000) is more than compensated by
what he or she gains on the roundabouts (R100 000).
In a case of dolus incidens, where the effect of fraud was merely to influence the
terms of a contract which would in any event have been concluded, the representee’s
loss cannot be measured by comparing the values of the respective performances of
the parties, since neither was fully induced by the representation. Rather one should
measure the extent to which the representation inflated the performance that the
representee was prepared to make under the contract.
In Ranger’s case, it was held that where a thing is misrepresented to be free from
defects, the damages may be measured by the cost of removing the defect. With
respect, it is submitted that, despite the obvious practicality of such an approach, it
amounts to making the representation good; that is the contractual measure.
The decision in Bayer SA v Frost placed the remedies for intentional and negligent
misrepresentation on an equal footing.
Since a culpable misrepresentation is a delict, the measure of the misrepresentee’s
damages is the normal delictual measure and that is that damages are calculated
according to the plaintiff’s negative interest.
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That means that the misrepresentee must, by the award of a sum of money, be placed
in the hypothetical (assumed) position in which he would have been had the delict
not occurred.
He can never claim to be placed in the position in which he would have been had the
misrepresentation been true.
A rule of thumb is always to decide how much worse off the misrepresentee is
financially as a result of the misrepresentation. Where the contract is rescinded
restitution takes place and the misrepresentee’s loss will normally take the form of
wasted costs, which he may have incurred in connection with the conclusion and
cancellation of the contract. Whether such reimbursement may be regarded as
damages proper or merely part of restitution itself is not clear but this distinction will
be of little importance in most cases.
Negligent misrepresentation
Bayer South Africa (Pty) Ltd. The court held that there was no good reason why the
general action for negligent misstatements recognized in the Trust Bank case should
not be applied in the pre-contractual sphere, to a negligent misrepresentation inducing
a contract. This was subject of course to all the requirements for Aquilian liability
being satisfied, with particular emphasis being placed on the elements of
wrongfulness and causation affording the courts with the necessary means of
controlling the scope of this new form of liability.
Innocent misrepresentation
Can a party induced to contract by an innocent misrepresentation is entitled, instead
of rescinding the contract, to abide by it and claim the financial equivalent of
rescission and restitution: ‘restitutional damages’, ‘partial restitution’, ‘reduction of
performance’ or ‘quanti minoris type damages’, such as relief has at various times
been called.
In the case of sale, relief is now sometimes available under the action quanti minoris.
Phame (Pty) Ltd: In that case a purchaser who had been induced to contract by a
seller’s unfounded dictum et promissum may invoke the aedilitian remedies: if he or
she would not otherwise have bought at all, he or she may cancel the contract with
action redhibitoria. The purchaser may instead choose to abide by the contract and
claim a reduction of the purchase price with the action quanti minoris. Since a dictum
et promissum (as defined in Phame) is essentially misrepresentation as to the quality
of the merx and is actionable even if made without fraud or negligence, the purchaser
is in effect afforded a remedy in ‘damages’ for innocent misrepresentation.
The relief obtainable under the action quanti minoris is limited to a reduction of price;
in the absence of fraud or a warranty, the purchaser is not entitled to consequential
damages, except perhaps when the seller is a manufacturer or merchant seller who
publically professes to have attributes of skill and expert knowledge in relation to the
kind of goods sold. The measure of reduction is not the difference between the agreed
price and the price that would have been paid but for the misstatement, as in the cases
of dolus incidens, but rather the difference between the price paid and the actual value
of the merx. Purchaser would in any event have paid more for the merx than it was
worth, it will suit him or her better to allege an innocent dictum et promissum than a
fraudulent misrepresentation.
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The aedilitian actions apply only to the contract of sale, and only to
misrepresentations that fall within the concept of a dictum et promissum.
In view of the criticism leveled at the granting of the actio quanti minoris on the
ground of an innocent misrepresentation, it was only to be expected that the whole
matter would sooner or later be submitted to the Appellate Division, and the court
was asked to decide upon the following questions:
Can an innocent misrepresentation ever entitle a buyer to a reduction of the
price under the actio quanti minoris?
If so, under what circumstances?
The aedilitian remedies are available if the thing sold suffered from a latent
defect at the time of the sale.
The aedilitian remedies are also available if the seller made a dictum et
promissum to the buyer upon the faith of which the buyer entered into the
contract or agreed to the purchase price in question; and it turned out to be
false.
A dictum is a material statement made by the seller to the buyer during the
negotiations, bearing on the quality of the thing and going beyond mere praise
and commendation (puffing).
Where a statement by the seller goes beyond puffing will depend on the
circumstances of each case.
This test of involuntary reliance found favour with our courts and has been applied in
virtually all of the subsequent cases involving nondisclosure. Its influence is readily
apparent in the general test for liability recently adopted by the Supreme Court of
Appeal – Absa v Fouche.
CASES:
In the Trotman v Edwick case, 2 sellers told the buyer that the property they were
selling him included a strip of municipal land.
The council did however, later build on that land.
The buyer therefore sued the sellers for intentional misrepresentation.
The court held that he could get damages.
Therefore, the buyer got the difference of what he paid and the current market value
of the property.
In De Jager v Grunder, the buyer (D) and seller (G) entered into a contract described
as a sale but in fact it was an exchange.
The thing ‘sold’ was G’s farm with cattle and equipment and the price ‘paid’ was D’s
farm X and Z, including cattle and equipment and a further R7000.
To work out the cash amount D paid, they valued all 3 farms.
But D made an intentional misrepresentation.
However, the court said that the price paid minus the actual value of the farm was G’s
damages.
In Ranger v Wykerd, R bought a house with a swimming pool for R22 000.
R asked W if the pool was structurally sound.
W said yes even though he knew it was cracked.
R bought the house and the pool leaked.
He had to pay R1 250 in repairs.
R sued W for R1 250.
He further said that he would have paid R20 750 for the house had he known the truth
about the cracked pool.
The court said that the reasonable amount paid for pool repairs is generally R1 000
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Duress occurs where a prospective contractant is forced or compelled by the other
contractant, or someone for whose acts he or she may be held liable, to enter into a
contract. The decision on the part of the innocent party to enter into the contract has
been influenced by the improper conduct of the other party. Thus, in the same way
that a misrepresentation that does not vitiate consent to the contract renders the
contract voidable (rescindable), so consensus that has been obtained by way of duress
renders the contract rescindable. Consensus is present, but it has been obtained in an
improper (wrongful) manner. This improper conduct on the part of one contractant
renders the contract voidable at the instance of the other party.
Since duress may be regarded as a delict, a contractant who wishes to avail himself of
the remedies for duress should prove the existence of the elements required for
delictual liability, just as in the case of a culpable misrepresentation.
The courts do not express the requirements for redress on the basis of duress i.t.o. the
elements of a delict.
In Broodryk v Smuts the court expressed the elements necessary to set aside or rescind
a contract on the ground of duress as follows:
The approach of the court to the requirements for redress on the basis of duress
indicates that the following is usually required:
UNDUE INFLUENCE
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Refers to improper pressure brought to bear upon a person in order to induce him or
her to enter into a contract.
In Preller v Jordaan, the Appellate Division accepted that the doctrine of undue
influence is part and parcel of our law and held that the sources of common law
indicate that the concept of dolus is wide enough to cover instances which would be
regarded in English law as undue influence.
In Patel v Grobbelaar, the AD reaffirmed the decision in the Jordaan case and held
that where a party to a contract requests a court to set aside the contract on the ground
of undue influence, an onus rests on that party to prove:
• That the other party exercised influence over him
• That this influence weakened his power of resistance and made his will pliable
• That the other party exercised this influence in an unscrupulous manner in
order to induce him to consent to a transaction which firstly was to his detriment and
secondly, which he with normal free will would not have concluded
If the person who holds a position of trust in such a relationship, takes advantage of
the trust placed in him in order to influence the other party into entering into a
contract with him, and in so doing obtains a benefit which he would not enjoy were it
not for the relationship of trust existing between them, it is accepted that he has
exercised undue influence on the other party.
The contract may then be rescinded at the option of the innocent party.
Examples of such relationships of trust are those of parent and child, attorney and
client, doctor and patient, etc.
Abuse of circumstances:
This is where A unconscionably exploits an emergency situation in which B finds
himself to secure B’s consent to a prejudicial contract (the emergency not having
been caused by A).
In Blackburn v Mitchell – a ship was stranded in Table Bay and the tug boat captain
offered to tow the boat to dock for an exorbitant fee. The captain of the ship agreed
reluctantly, and promised to pay, adding that the money would never be paid. The tug
towed the ship to dock and the money was not paid. The tug captain sued for the
money. The court said the ship captain was not bound by the agreement but was
bound to pay a reasonable amount for the towing.
Irrelevant and relevant mistake
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Sometimes a mistake does not negate consensus (and is therefore an irrelevant
mistake) if it did not affect the mistaken party’s decision to enter into a contract. If
the mistaken party would have entered into the contract, despite a mistake that causes
dissensus.
In Khan v Naidoo, the appellant signed an agreement as surety for the debt of her son
while under the impression that she was consenting to something completely
different. The appellant’s mistake would normally indicate an absence of consent on
her part, the court held that she was bound to the suretyship because she would have
signed the document even if she had been aware of its true nature.
A principal must bear the brunt of the misrepresentation of his agent who causes an
operative mistake on the part of a third party; this results in the undoing of the
agreement on the basis of a iustus error (eg Allen v Sixteen Stirling Investments;
Maresky v Morkel; Goldberg v Carstens; Kok v Osborne.) In such circumstances the
misrepresentation of the agent activates successful invocation of reliance in its
indirect or negative form; that is that no contract exists because of material and
reasonable error on the part of the third party. One could also argue that where an
agent misrepresents (in as many words or by other conduct) to a third party that he
has the necessary authority to conclude an agreement of specific content on behalf of
his principal, whereas in fact he has exceeded his actual authority, it could prompt an
application of reliance in its direct or positive form; that is that despite dissensus a
contract exists based on the reasonable reliance in consensus of the third party (Van
Ryn Wine & Spirit). However, a prerequisite for rendering the principal accountable
in either instance is that the agent must at least have acted within the general scope of
his authority, although he has exceeded the private instructions of the principal
unbeknown to the third party.
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Actual agreement between the parties is the primary basis of a contract.
This approach is known as the intention theory.
It places the emphasis on the intention of the contracting parties. Consensus is
therefore considered to be the primary basis for contractual liability – INTENTION.
However, the intention theory cant be used in every situation, and then contractual
liability has a secondary basis.
This basis is the reasonable reliance of one contractual party that agreement between
the parties exists.
Mistake in contract does not simply mean that a contracting party was under a wrong
impression regarding one or more fact connected with the contract; what it means is
that one or even both the contractants act under some or other incorrect impression
which affect the contract between them.
Material mistake:
Non-material mistake
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Non-material mistakes, do not affect an element of consensus.
Eg: Diedericks v Minister of Lands, the defendant extended an offer to the plaintiff to
purchase property from the latter. However, the defendant could merely have invoked
a clause in an existing lease contract in terms of which the defendant would have
repossessed the property at a much cheaper rate. The plaintiff accepted the offer, but
subsequently the defendant refused to honour its undertaking, alleging that the offer
was made as a result of a clerical error. The plaintiff asked the court to declare the
contract valid. The court found that the defendant’s mistake related to its motive for
making the offer, and did not exclude mutual assent (consensus) between the parties.
Consequently, a valid contract existed.
If the mistake in motive was induced by misrepresentation of the other party, the
mistaken party may have a remedy, provided the requirements for the particular form
of misrepresentation have been compiled with.
Reliance-based correctives
The courts have alternated between subjective and objective bases of contract. The
subjective approach has been qualified by the doctrine of estoppel and the direct
reliance theory. The declaration theory is an objective approach and has been
corrected by the iustus error doctrine (indirect application of the reliance theory).
The point of intersection between the subjective and objective approaches is reliance.
Reliance is a secondary theory of liability
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8. ILLEGAL CONTRACTS THAT ARE VOID
An underlying principle of the law of contract is that agreements seriously entered
into should be enforced. This finds expression in the principle of sanctity of contract
(pacta sunt servanda). On the other hand, agreements contrary to public policy will
not be enforced. Considerations of public policy indicating that an agreement should
not be enforced are to be found in legislation, the common law, good morals and the
public interest.
8.1 Public interest
The courts often state that a contract is illegal because it is contrary to good morals on
the one hand, or public policy on the other.
In Sasfin. Agreements which are clearly inimical to the interests of the community,
whether they are contrary to law or morality, or run counter to social or economic
expedience, will accordingly, on the grounds of public policy not be enforced.
Recognised public interests include:
• Voluntarily concluded contracts should be compiled with an enforced
(sanctity of contracts);
• Simple justice between individuals should be taken into account;
• As far as possible, the parties to a contract should have equal bargaining
power;
• The administration of justice should not be defeated, obstructed or perverted;
• The safety of the State;
• The public service should function properly; and
• The full exercise by persons of their legal rights should not be interfered with.
What is the correct approach to a contractual term that conflicts potentially with
a constitutional provision?
Recently, in Barkhuizen v Napier, the Constitutional Court discussed the question
whether the validity of the contractual term can be directly tested against the
provision of the Bill of Rights. The majority seriously doubted the appropriateness of
such an approach, because of two insurmountable obstacles related to the fact that the
contractual term is neither a law of general application, nor conduct. The first
difficulty is that a contractual term cannot be subjected to a limitation analysis under
s36(1) of the Constitution, as this section only applies to a law of general application.
The second difficulty is that s172(1)(a) of the Constitution cannot apply to contractual
terms as this section requires a court to declare a law or conduct inconsistent with the
constitution as invalid.
The correct approach to a constitutional challenge to a contractual term therefore is to
determine whether the term of the contract is contrary to public policy.
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8.2 Statutory illegality
A contract is void where the relevant statutory enactment expressly so provides,
example, sale of dangerous weapons. The particular statute has to be interpreted and
the courts take the cumulative effect of the following factors into consideration in
determining whether the legislator impliedly intended the contract to be void:
What is the object of the statute and what mischief (harm) is the statute directed
against? If the validity of the contract brings about the harm the statute is directed
against, it is an indication that the legislator intended the contract to be void.
Does the enactment impose a criminal sanction? This is usually an indication that the
legislator intended the contract to be void. However, this is not the case where the
sanction provides adequate protection against the mischief that the statute is directed
against.
Does the enactment merely server to protect the revenue of the state? If the answer is
in the affirmative, it is an indication that the legislator intended the contract to be
valid.
Does the provision merely protect individuals or does it involve a public interest that
requires protection by voiding the contract? If the provision is for the protection of
the public, it would be an indication that the legislator intended the contract to be
void.
What are the consequences of a particular interpretation of the contract? A balance-
of-convenience test is employed that questions whether nullity of the contract would
cause greater inconvenience and injustice than allowing the legal conduct to stand.
What is the role of principle of good faith plays in determining what is fair and
reasonable in a contract? Good faith has been recognised as a fundamental principle
that underlies the law of contract and informs its various rules and principles,
including those regarding illegality. Although good faith may have a subjective or
objective meaning, commentators have suggested an objective test: has the one party
so unreasonably and one-sidedly promoted his or her own interest at the expense of
the other party that this infringement of the principle of good faith outweighs the
public interest in the enforcement of the contract? The unfairness and
unreasonableness of a contract is in itself insufficient reason for declaring the contract
contrary to public policy, as the courts do not have a general equitable jurisdiction to
declare unfair or unreasonable or unconscionable contracts invalid.
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In Sasfin (Pty) Ltd v Beukes, two contractual terms gave S (a financier) immediate
and effective control of B’s income as a doctor. B was furthermore not able to end
this situation; only S could. The contract gave protection to S beyond what was
reasonably necessary to protect its interest in having security for B’s indebtedness.
The Appellate Division found that the terms placed B in the position of a virtual slave
working for the benefit of S. The court concluded:
An agreement having this effect is clearly unconscionable and incompatible with the
public interest, and therefore contrary to public policy.
Examples:
- If the contract is so excessively one-sided in favour of the party other than the
consumer;
- If the contract is so adverse to the consumer as to be inequitable;
- If a term is unfair, unreasonable or unconscionable;
- If the attention of the consumer has not been drawn to the fact, nature or effect of
certain terms of the contract.
A court may take the following factors into account to determine whether the contract
is in whole or in part unconscionable, unjust, unreasonable or unfair:
- Circumstances of the contract that existed or were reasonably foreseeable at the time
the conduct occurred or the contract was concluded;
- The conduct of the parties respectively;
- Whether the consumer had to do anything that was not reasonably necessary for the
legitimate interest of the supplier as a result of the conduct of the supplier;
- The fair value of goods or services;
- The amount for which and circumstances under which the consumer could get
identical goods or services from a different supplier;
- Whether the goods were manufactured.
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late payment for five months, the lessor cancelled the lease. The court found that the
lessee’s case fell far short of the requirement of exceptional unfairness.
Court held, that the enforcement of a clause would be invalid if the enforcement was
so unfair or unreasonable in the circumstances that its enforcement was contrary to
public policy.
- Before 1939 the courts applied the par delictum rule rigorously and made no
exceptions.
- For example, in the Brandt case, the sale of a cow on a Sunday was involved and the
court refused to allow the plaintiff any redress.
- In 1939, the Appellate Division reconsidered the law on the point and formulated a
new and most important principle.
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- In the case of Jajbhay v Cassim the Appellate Division held that this rule may be
relaxed in appropriate cricumstances in order to do justice between the parties.
- Briefly, the Appellate Division argued as follows: the par delictum rule is founded
on principles of public policy; but public policy also demands that justice shall be
done; therefore, it cannot be in the public’s interest to enforce the par delictum rule
where this will be patently unjust towards the plaintiff.
- This rule is therefore to be applied as a general rule, to which an exception must be
made whenever ‘simple justice between man and man’ demands it.
- Klokow v Sullivan: No definite criteria have, however, been laid down to decide
whether the rule should be relaxed or not. The issue of relaxation may arise in such an
infinite variety of circumstances that it would be unwise for the courts to shackle their
own discretion by predetermined rules or even guidelines as to when relaxation of the
par delictum rule will be allowed.
The enforcement if a restraint brings two contractual values into play: sanctity of
contract and freedom of trade.
Initially, the courts have preference to freedom of trade under influence of the
English law.
However, in Magna Alloys and Research (SA)(Pty) Ltd v Ellis, the Appellate Division
overturned this approach in favour of the sanctity of contract. A contract in restraint
of trade is now valid and enforceable, unless the party wishing to escape the
consequences of the agreement can prove that the restraint is contrary to public
interest and thus unenforceable. The restraint denier consequently bears the onus of
proving that the enforcement of the agreement is contrary to policy. The court also
held that an agreement in restraint of trade that is contrary to public policy, is not
void, but only unenforceable.
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by weighing the interests of the community on the one hand, and the individual
interests of the contracting parties on the other hand.
The first question of the Basson test requires that the interest protected by the
restraint of trade agreement should be worthy of protection. There is no exhaustive
list of protectable interests, ‘proprietary interests’, goodwill and confidential
information are two generally recognised proprietary interests.
The second question of the Basson test enquires whether the protectable interest is
threatened by the conduct of the other party. This will be the case when the interest is
infringed, but the mere risk of infringement, objectively assessed, will suffice.
An example of such a risk is the relationship that an employee has with customers is
of such a nature that when he or she leaves employment, the customers will be easily
induced to follow him or her to a new business and to infringe the former employers
goodwill.
The third question of the Basson test involves weighing up of the protectable
interest(s) of the one party (restraint enforcer) against the interest of the other party
(restraint denier) to be economically active and productive.
The question as to the reasonableness of a restraint depends on the facts of every case.
The fourth question of the Basson test involves any further relevant aspect of public
policy, other than the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the restraint as between
the parties. The reasonableness of a restraint as between the parties is only an
indication of whether it probably is against public policy or not.
In Magna, it was held that the question whether a restraint is in conflict with the
public interest is to be assessed with regard to the circumstances prevailing at the time
when enforcement of the restraint is sought.
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In Magna Alloys, the court also held that an agreement in restraint of trade may be
enforced partially. The reasons for partial enforcement are that the requirements of
public policy in restraint of trade cases relate directly to the effect of the courts order
and not primarily to the terms in which the parties happen to have agreed, and the
public interest requires partial enforcement in appropriate instances. The power of the
court to allow partial enforcement is subject to certain limitations.
The party seeking partial enforcement must raise the issue and establish a basis for
partial enforcement. The party who does not wish to be bound by the restraint still
bears the onus of proving that partial enforcement is contrary to the public interest.
A court will not partially enforce an unreasonable restraint that requires a drastic
recasting of its provisions to make it reasonable (‘major plastic surgery’). The
question is whether partial enforcement will materially alter the contract.
There is no exhaustive list of factors that a court will take into account in determining
whether partial enforcement is justified. Two relevant factors are whether the restraint
clause was calculated to be unduly oppressive or designed to terrorise, and whether
partial enforcement would operate harshly or unfairly towards the person bound by
the restraint.
5. IMPOSSIBILITY OF CONTRACTS
Pieters & Co v Salomon, where the plaintiffs offered to pay the amount owing by one
Berger to the defendant in the belief that it amounted to £345, when in fact it was
£490. The defendant accepted the offer, but was unaware of the plaintiffs’ mistake.
The trial court found that the defendant was entitled to payment of the full amount.
On appeal, the plaintiffs contended that they never intended to make themselves
responsible for more than £345. The Appellate Division upheld the defendant’s claim
for the full amount.
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Hodgson Bros v South African Railways, wherein the plaintiffs offered, in writing, to
sell a certain lorry to the defendant for £500. The defendant wrote back and indicated
that it would be prepared to take over the lorry, provided certain spare parts for it
were included. The plaintiff accepted these terms. Shortly afterwards, the plaintiffs
received a telegram informing them that the defendant had omitted in its letter to state
the price that it was prepared to pay for the lorry, and that this price was £300. The
plaintiffs adopted the stance that the defendant was bound by contract to purchase for
£500, while the defendant repudiated any form of contractual liability.
The elements of the doctrine of quasi-mutual assent or reliance theory may be divided
into two constituent parts. First requirement is that the contract denier must have
induced the reliance or belief of the contract assertor that the parties had reached
consensus, or that the contract denier had agreed to the contractual terms in question.
Second, that the contract assertor’s reliance must be reasonable in the circumstances.
Ridon, the plaintiff was to receive a sum of money pursuant to the sale and transfer of
a wine farm. The defendant was an incorporated firm of attorneys attending to the
transfer of the farm to the new owner. The plaintiff needed assurance that he would
be paid the money upon transfer of the farm. The defendant’s directors provided the
plaintiff with a written undertaking that stated:
On behalf of Mr M Schoeni we hereby undertake to pay to yourself the amount of
R358000 upon registration of the above property in the name of the purchaser.
It later transpired that the particular director was instructed by his client not to pay the
amount to the plaintiff, because the possible claims that had to be set off against this
amount. The plaintiff was therefore only paid a potion of the money stated in the
undertaking. In an action for the balance, the plaintiff argued that in terms of the
undertaking, the defendant was personally liable in contract to pay the outstanding
amount to the plaintiff. The defendant’s defense was that it had merely acted on the
instructions of its client and that no contract had arisen between it and the plaintiff.
The party who alleges a contract on the basis of quasi-mutual assent bears the onus of
proving, on a balance of probabilities.
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Came into operation on 1 April 2011. The Act aims to establish a legal framework
for the achievement and maintenance of a consumer market that is fair, accessible,
efficient, sustainable and responsible, for the benefit of consumers generally; to
promote fair business practices; and to protect consumers from unconscionable,
unjust or unreasonable business practices.
FUNDAMENTAL CONSUMER RIGHTS
The right to equal treatment in the marketplace (which affords protection against discriminatory
marketing, for example);
The right to privacy (which affords protection against direct marketing practices);
The right to choose (which covers a host of ancillary rights, such as the right to select suppliers, to
choose or examine goods and to return them, to a cooling-off period in certain circumstances, and
to cancel advance bookings, reservations or orders);
The right to disclosure and information (disclosure, for example, of the price of goods and
services, and that goods are reconditioned, or are gray market goods, with no misleading labelling
or trade descriptions, and with all information in plan and understandable language);
The right to fair and honest dealing (which affords protection against unconscionable conduct such
as fraud, duress, undue influence, misleading representation, pyramid schemes and over- selling or
over- booking);
The right to fair, just and reasonable terms and conditions; and
The right to fair value, good quality and safety (which extends the common-law protection of
consumers significantly by introducing a strict no-fault regime of liability or harm caused by
defective products).
These rights are to be protected and enforced not only through the courts, but also
through national consumer protection institutions. The scope of the Act is to apply to
most transactions concluded in the ordinary course of business between suppliers
and consumers within South Africa, as well as to the promotion of goods and services
that could lead to such transactions, and to the goods and services themselves once
the transaction has been concluded.
Provisions of the Act dealing with the consumer’s right to fair, just and reasonable
terms and conditions. These include: (Constraints)
Terms aimed at defeating the purposes and policy of the Act, or misleading the
consumer, or subjecting the consumer to fraudulent conduct.
Terms that purport to waive or deprive a consumer of rights under the Act, or to avoid
supplier’s obligations under the Act;
A term that purports to limit or exclude the liability of a supplier (or those for whom
he or she is responsible) for harm caused by gross negligence; and
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A term that falsely expresses an acknowledgement by the consumer that no
warranties or misrepresentations were made in connection with the agreement.
One consequence of these provisions is that liability for ordinary (but not gross)
negligence may still be excluded by means of an appropriately worded exemption
clause, provided the exclusion is fair and reasonable and that it is adequately drawn to
the attention of the consumer before or at the time of entry into the transaction.
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