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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Alan Auld Associates Ltd v Rick Pollard Associates & Anor [2008] EWCA Civ 655 (15 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/655.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 655 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
(MS RECORDER SHERWIN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
____________________
ALAN AULD ASSOCIATES LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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RICK POLLARD ASSOCIATES AND ANOTHER |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr D Sweeting QC and Mr S Gray (instructed by Keeble Hawson) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tuckey:
"16. a) That at the relevant time Dr Pollard was partially retired
b) That the only work he was performing was for the Claimant under this agreement
c) This was his only source of earned income and therefore his sole means of support beyond the use of savings and therefore a matter of considerable importance to him
d) He was paying his expenses out of his own pocket ahead of being reimbursed with them"
"I can understand a delay if we have a client who hasn't paid you on time, but I do know that the UKAEA are prompt payers and you're now using me as a free overdraft facility, which we both know isn't fair!"
He had asked for interest several times, but was told by Dr Auld that if he did so he would not be working for him much longer. The judge held:
"14. …there was no good reason within the terms of the contract why [Dr Pollard] should not have been paid promptly… It is clear to me from the evidence that the reason why he was not promptly paid was because of cash flow problems that the Claimant was experiencing because of other fields of their business. I suspect that they saw [Dr Pollard] as a soft target who did not have the clout to complain about being paid on time."
"15. The question then arises as to what [Dr Pollard] was entitled to do as a result of that breach. Was he entitled to
a) Regard the contract as having been repudiated by the Claimant?
b) Treat the breach as being fundamental and end the contract himself?
c) Give notice and end the contract?
d) Continue with the contract but seek damages for the breach?"
"22. This term went to the heart of the agreement between the parties.
23. There were repeated breaches of this term by the Claimant entitling [Dr Pollard] to terminate the agreement.
24. In any event [Dr Pollard] made time of the essence of the contract after 31 July 2005. Thereafter the Claimant continued to be in breach of the contract. By this breach the Claimant repudiated the contract entitling [Dr Pollard] to view the contract as being at an end.
25. [Dr Pollard] communicated this to the Claimant through Dr Auld on 7th June 2006."
"The repeated breaches of contract by the Claimant constituted repudiatory breach of contract by the Claimant, which [Dr Pollard] was entitled to accept on 7 June 2006."
"A renunciation of the contract occurs when one party by words or conduct evinces an intention not to perform, or expressly declares that he is or will be unable to perform, his obligations under the contract in some essential respect… An absolute refusal by one party to perform his side of the contract will entitle the other party to treat himself as discharged, as will also a clear and unambiguous assertion by one party that he will be unable to perform when the time for performance should arise. Short of such express refusal or declaration, however, the test is to ascertain whether the action or actions of the party in default are such as to lead a reasonable person to conclude that he no longer intends to be bound by its provisions. The renunciation is then evidenced by conduct. Also the party in default may intend in fact to fulfil (the contract) but may be determined to do so only in a manner substantially inconsistent with his obligations… In such a case, there is little difficulty in holding that the contract has been renounced. Nevertheless, not every intimation of an intention not to perform or of an inability to perform some part of the contract will amount to a renunciation. Even a deliberate breach, actual or threatened, will not necessarily entitle the innocent party to treat himself as discharged, since it may sometimes be that such a breach can appropriately be sanctioned in damages…
"It is not a mere refusal or omission of one of the contracting parties to do something which he ought to do, that will justify the other in repudiating the contract; but there must be an absolute refusal to perform his side of the contract.' If one party evinces an intention not to perform or declares his inability to perform some, but not all, of his obligations under the contract, then the right of the other party to treat himself as discharged depends on whether the non-performance of those obligations will amount to a breach of a condition of the contract or deprive him of substantially the whole benefit which it was the intention of the parties that he should obtain from the obligations of the parties under the contract then remaining unperformed. Words or conduct which do not amount to a renunciation will not justify a discharge."
"So far as the plaintiffs were concerned it is clear from facts stated earlier in this judgment that the only effect of the late payments was that the plaintiffs may have incurred liability to their bank for a comparatively insignificant sum by way of extra interest which in any event they could have recovered from the defendants. The case would have been quite different if the defendants' breaches had been such as reasonably to shatter the plaintiffs' confidence in the defendants' ability to pay for the goods with which the plaintiffs supplied them. I think that, in such circumstances, the consequences of the breach could properly have been regarded as most serious, indeed fundamental, and going to the root of the contract so that the plaintiffs would have been entitled to refuse to continue doing business with the defendants."
"The question for the court (and indeed the contracting parties) in a case like this is whether the cumulative effect of the breaches of contract complained of is so serious as to justify the innocent party bringing the contract to a premature end. The technical term is 'repudiatory' but that is just a label to describe the consequence which may flow. It is not always an entirely satisfactory label, if it implies that the conduct itself must always be such as to demonstrate an intention to abandon contractual obligations: while this will sometimes be so it is not an invariable requirement. As the judge indicated there are in effect three categories: (1) those cases in which the parties have agreed either that the term is so important that any breach will justify termination or that the particular breach is so important that it will justify termination; (2) those contractors who simply walk away from their obligations thus clearly indicating their intention no longer to be bound"
I interpolate our case is not in either of these two categories, but it is in the third category which she defined as:
"those cases in which the cumulative effect of the breaches which have taken place is sufficiently serious to justify the innocent party in bringing the contract to a premature end. It is clear that the test of what is sufficiently serious to bring the case within the third of these categories is severe."
"These contracts are like building contracts in that the accumulation of past breaches is relevant, not only for its own sake, but also for what it shows about the future. In my view, the judge was right to ask himself whether the cumulative breaches were such as to justify an inference that the contractor would continue to deliver a substandard performance."
This last passage indicates, as indeed the authorities show, that when asking the question whether one party has evinced an intention no longer to be bound by an agreement, it is legitimate to draw inferences from past breaches as well as taking account of the prospect of future breaches.
"In reality it is difficult to exaggerate the crucial importance of pay in any contract of employment. In simple terms the employee offers his skills and efforts in exchange for his pay: that is the understanding at the heart of the contractual arrangement between him and his employers…In my judgment the question whether non-payment of agreed wages, or interference by an employer with a salary package, is or is not fundamental to the continued existence of a contract of employment, depends on the critical distinction to be drawn between an employer's failure to pay, or delay in paying, agreed remuneration, and his deliberate refusal to do so. Where the failure or delay constitutes a breach of contract, depending on the circumstances, this may represent no more than a temporary fault in the employer's technology, an accounting error or simple mistake, or illness, or accident, or unexpected events… If so it would be open to the court to conclude that the breach did not go to the root of the contract. On the other hand if the failure or delay in payment were repeated and persistent, perhaps also unexplained, the court might be driven to conclude that the breach or breaches were indeed repudiatory."
This case shows the importance which the courts attach to payment terms in contracts of employment. Dr Pollard's contract was a contract for services but I think the analogy's apt.
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Toulson:
Order: Appeal dismissed