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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Cotter v. Brewster [1997] IEHC 187 (18th December, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1997/187.html Cite as: [1997] IEHC 187 |
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1. These
proceedings arise out of an agreement entered into between the Plaintiff and
the Defendant on the 15th July, 1992 at the R.D.S. Showgrounds, Ballsbridge in
the city of Dublin whereby the Plaintiff agreed to sell to the Defendant and
the Defendant agreed to purchase for a sum of £9,000 sterling a 3 year old
bay gelding horse named Echo Boy. That the parties entered into the said
agreement for sale is beyond any doubt; each having admitted as much in
evidence given before me. However, while the Plaintiff seeks to enforce the
said agreement in the sense that he claims from the Defendant a sum of
£7,000 sterling being the balance of monies allegedly due and owing to him
by the Defendant arising from the said sale, the Defendant, for her part,
maintains that the Plaintiff was in breach of several of the terms of the said
agreement for sale, whereby the consideration for the payment of the
contractual price for the said horse has wholly failed and that the Defendant
is thereby entitled to rescission of the said agreement for sale and to damages
for breach of contract.
2. Insofar
as the Plaintiff's claim is concerned, it is accepted by the Defendant that, if
the said agreement for sale is enforceable, there is, indeed, a balance of
£7,000 sterling due and owing by the Defendant to the Plaintiff in respect
of the purchase of the said horse. In this regard, while, when the sale was
concluded, the Defendant paid to the Plaintiff a sum of £2,000 sterling in
cash and gave to him two cheques; one drawn in his favour on the Bank of
Scotland in the sum of £5,000 sterling and the other drawn in his favour
on the TSB Bank in the sum of £2,000 sterling, she subsequently
countermanded payment of those cheques whereby the Plaintiff received no value
therefore. Accordingly, on the face of the transaction, there remains due and
owing to the Plaintiff the sum of £7,000 sterling. However, in her
defence, the Defendant claims that the said agreement for sale was subject to
four terms arising from specific representations in that behalf made by the
Plaintiff to the Defendant before the sale was concluded. These terms were;
(1) that the said horse had never been lame in its life, (2) that the said
horse had been certified as being fit by the Plaintiff's veterinary surgeon and
that a certificate from the said veterinary surgeon would be furnished by the
Plaintiff, (3) that the said horse would be ideal as an event horse for the
Defendant's daughter and (4) that the said horse had no vices. The Defendant
claimed that each of those terms had been breached by the Plaintiff, in that;
(1) the said horse was lame when sold by the Plaintiff to the Defendant on the
15th July 1992, (2) the Plaintiff failed to provide a veterinary certificate
for the said horse, (3) the said horse was not ideal as an event horse by
reason of its lameness and (4) the said horse did have vices, in that, it was
and is a box walker.
3. At
the outset, I must determine whether or not the said agreement for sale was
subject to all or any one of the said terms asserted by the Defendant. In this
connection, I have no doubt at all but that the Plaintiff did, indeed,
represent to the Defendant that the said horse was not lame and had never
manifested lameness to him. He conceded under cross examination that, in reply
to a specific query in that behalf from the Defendant, he had told her that the
horse had never exhibited any lameness to him. Accordingly, I am satisfied
that it was a term of the agreement for sale that the horse had never
manifested lameness. Now, while, in the course of his evidence, the Plaintiff
vehemently denied that it was a term of the said agreement for sale that he
would furnish the Defendant with a certificate of fitness in respect of the
said horse from his own veterinary surgeon, he did concede that he had told the
Defendant that, some few days prior to the said sale, he had had the horse
examined by his own veterinary surgeon, a Mr Liam Hutch, who had then passed
it as being fit in all respects. Mr Cotter said that he had arranged for that
examination in order to satisfy himself that the horse was fit to participate
at the forthcoming Dublin Horse Show because it would be a waste of time and
money for him to take the horse to that show if it were not fit. However, he
rejected an assertion by the Plaintiff that he told her that it would be waste
of time for her to have the horse subjected to a veterinary examination by a
veterinary surgeon of her own choice, although he said that he told her that
she had that option, if she so wished and, in particular, he rejected the
Plaintiff's assertion that he went out of his way to persuade her not to have
the horse examined by a veterinary surgeon of her own choice. He also denied
an allegation by the Plaintiff that she had told him that she required a
certificate of fitness in respect of the said horse from a veterinary surgeon
for insurance purposes and that he had agreed to furnish her with a certificate
in respect of the examination carried out by Mr Hutch a few days earlier, in
spite of the fact that the Defendant's evidence in that behalf was fully
corroborated by a friend of hers, a Mrs Elizabeth Parker, who gave evidence
that she had been present during some of the negotiations and had heard Mrs
Brewster telling the Plaintiff that she required a certificate from a
veterinary surgeon for insurance purposes and his response that he would post
it on to her during the following week. In fact, the Plaintiff said that it
was not until a few days after the sale, when the Defendant telephoned him to
advise him that the horse was lame, that she first mentioned the question of
insurance and first requested that he obtain a certificate from Mr Hutch so
that she might furnish it to her insurance company. In that connection Mr
Cotter said that he did not, in fact, contact Mr Hutch with regard to
furnishing a certificate to the Defendant but rather gave the Defendant Mr
Hutch's telephone number and suggested that she contact him directly. Mr
Cotter added that, if, as she said she had, the Defendant had received a
certificate from Mr Hutch, it must have been posted to her directly by Mr Hutch
although the Defendant said that she had received Mr Hutch's certificate
without a covering letter in an envelope addressed to her in handwriting which
she recognised as that of the Plaintiff. In the light of the evidence given
before me, I have no doubt but that, during the course of the negotiations
between the Plaintiff and the Defendant for the sale of the horse in question,
there was discussion with regard to a certificate of fitness from a veterinary
surgeon. I am also satisfied that the Defendant did pose the question as to
whether or not Echo Boy had ever manifested lameness, that the Plaintiff denied
any such manifestation and, in support of that denial, pointed out that the
horse had been examined and passed fit a few days earlier by his own veterinary
surgeon, Mr Hutch, and that, on the previous day, had also been examined and
had been passed fit to participate in the Dublin Horse Show by a veterinary
surgeon employed by the Royal Dublin Society; a Mr Henry Wall. Moreover, I
think it likely that, in the circumstance of those two examinations, the
Plaintiff could well have said that he did not consider that any further
examination by a veterinary surgeon was called for. However, I can think of no
good reason why the Plaintiff would have tried to persuade the Defendant not to
have the horse examined by a veterinary surgeon in her own interests. Despite
the fact that there was evidence which I accept that, some days after the sale,
the horse was diagnosed as suffering from degenerative joint disease in its
feet, I am satisfied that the Plaintiff was totally unaware of that fact and
had no reason whatsoever to suspect that there was anything physically wrong
when he sold it to the Defendant. Accordingly, so far as he was concerned, he
had nothing to fear from an examination by a veterinary surgeon of the
Plaintiff's choice and, therefore, I cannot see any reason why he would have
tried to dissuade the Plaintiff from arranging such an examination and, in
fact, I do not believe that he did. Accordingly, I do not think that that
agreement for sale was subject to a term that the Plaintiff furnished the
certificate of fitness from his veterinary surgeon so as to satisfy the
Defendant that the animal was suitable for purchase by her. In my view, the
Defendant was satisfied by the Plaintiff's assertions that the horse had been
examined and passed fit by two veterinary surgeons in the previous few days, by
the history of the horse's success at various shows throughout the country
during the previous two months and, more particularly, by its performance at
the Dublin Horse Show on the day of sale and by the tests through which she
herself put the horse immediately before she agreed to purchase it that it was
fit and well and that she made a deliberate decision not to have it further
examined by a veterinary surgeon in her own interests although she appreciated
that it would be usual for a purchaser to arrange for such an examination.
Accordingly, I do not think that it was in the minds of either the Plaintiff or
the Defendant that there was anything physically wrong with the horse at the
material time and that, therefore, it was not a term of the agreement for sale
that it was subject to the production of a certificate from the Plaintiff's
veterinary surgeon for the purpose of satisfying the Defendant that the horse
was fit and sound. I might add that I am influenced in this conclusion by the
fact that, in the originating letter of complaint from the Defendant's
Solicitor to the Plaintiff dated the 27th July, 1992, there is no suggestion
that the agreement for sale was a subject to the production of a certificate
from a veterinary surgeon. On the other hand, I am persuaded by the evidence
of Mrs Elizabeth Parker that, during the negotiations for the sale of the
horse, there was mention by Mrs Brewster that she would require a certificate
from a veterinary surgeon for the purpose of insuring the horse and I have
little doubt but that Mr Cotter agreed to furnish such a certificate. Again,
he would have no good reason for refusing to do so. Accordingly, I reject Mr
Cotter's evidence in that regard and I also reject his evidence that he was not
instrumental in furnishing the Defendant with a copy of Mr Hutch's certificate
of the 8th July, 1992. In this regard, as I have already pointed out, Mrs
Brewster gave evidence that she received that certificate without a covering
letter in an envelope addressed to her in handwriting which she recognised as
being that of the Plaintiff and she said that she recognised that handwriting
because it was the same as the handwriting on a card which she had received
from the Plaintiff in the month of April, 1992 and on the envelope in which
that card was enclosed. As it happened, the Plaintiff gave evidence that the
card which he accepted he had sent to the Defendant in April, 1992 and the
envelope in which it was enclosed was written by his wife, but I am satisfied
that it was in the same handwriting as that on the envelope to the Defendant in
which Mr Hutch's report of the 8th July, 1992 was enclosed. Accordingly, as I
have said, despite his protestations, I think that the Plaintiff was, in fact,
instrumental in forwarding Mr Hutch's report of the 8th July, 1992 to the
Defendant. I might add that I also do not accept the Plaintiff's evidence that
he did not forward Echo Boy's passport to the Defendant on the 27th July, 1992,
as she said that he did. Again, I am persuaded by the handwriting on the
envelope in which that passport was sent to the Defendant that it emanated from
the Plaintiff. I think that the Plaintiff's lack of honesty with regard to
these two matters is deplorable. I can only surmise that he must have
persuaded himself that any concessions that he might have made with regard to
those two matters would have damaged his case but, whatever his reasons, I
think that his dishonesty was inexcusable. On the other hand, even though I
accept that, when the sale of the horse was being negotiated, the Defendant
requested that she be furnished with a certificate from Mr Hutch and the
Plaintiff agreed to furnish such a certificate, as I have already indicated, I
think that it is clear that the Defendant required that certificate; not for
the purpose of satisfying herself as to the fitness of Echo Boy, but for the
purpose of having the horse insured and, therefore, the production of that
certificate was not a term of the agreement for sale to the extent that failure
to produce it would entitle the Defendant to avoid the sale. In any event, the
Plaintiff did, in fact, produce a certificate from a Mr Hutch and there was no
evidence which satisfied me that that certificate was not suitable for the
purpose of insuring the horse. As for the allegation that the agreement for
sale was subject to a term that Echo Boy would be ideal as an event horse for
the Defendant's daughter, while the Plaintiff conceded in evidence that he had
expressed the hope to the Defendant that the horse would be suitable as a show
jumper, or a hunter or even an event horse, in the circumstance that, at the
time of the agreement for sale, the horse had not yet been broken, or ridden, I
was satisfied by the available evidence that it was impossible for anyone, much
less the Plaintiff, to prognosticate with any certainty as to how it might
eventually turn out and therefore, I do not accept that Mr Cotter agreed, by
implication or otherwise, that it was a term of the said agreement that the
said horse would be ideal as an event horse. However, I think that it would be
an implicit term of the sale of any horse that it had no known vices and,
accordingly, I accept the Defendant's assertion that that was a term of the
agreement for sale the subject matter of these proceedings.
4. Given
that it is my view that the said agreement for sale was subject to terms;
firstly, that Echo Boy had never been lame in its life and, in particular, was
not lame when sold by the Plaintiff to the Defendant on the 15th July, 1992
and, secondly, that it had no vices, I must now consider whether or not the
Plaintiff was in breach of those terms. In this connection, as I have already
indicated, I am persuaded by the evidence of Mr Bruce David Steele, a
veterinary surgeon, who gave evidence on behalf of the Defendant, that, when he
examined Echo Boy on the 21st July, 1992, it manifested signs of lameness and I
fully accept Mr Steele's evidence that a subsequent x-ray examination of the
horse's feet showed that it was suffering from degenerative joint disease
which, in all likelihood, had been present for approximately six months. I
accept this evidence because, essentially, it was not contradicted. However,
while the horse may well have manifested signs of lameness when first seen by
Mr Steele on the 21st July, 1992 and, indeed, may also have manifested such
signs when examined by Mr Stephen Wilson, another veterinary surgeon who
examined the horse on behalf of the Defendant on the 18th July, 1992 and it may
well be that it was suffering from degenerative joint disease in both feet
during the previous six months, it does not, in my view, follow that the
Plaintiff was aware that the horse was lame, or that it was suffering from
degenerative joint disease when he agreed to sell it to the Defendant. In this
regard , there was irrefutable evidence that, between the 24th May, 1992 and
the 15th July, 1992 inclusive, Echo Boy had participated in eleven different
horse shows throughout the country and, on each occasion, he had performed with
distinction being champion horse on four occasions, second on four occasions
and third on three occasions. Moreover, there was evidence, which I accept,
that if, during any one of those shows, the horse had exhibited signs of
lameness it would have been taken out of the show by the relevant judge. That
never happened so I think that I am entitled to conclude that the horse never
manifested signs of lameness during any one of those shows. Moreover, apart
from the evidence of the Plaintiff himself, who said that, from the time that
he purchased Echo Boy in March of 1991, it had never manifested any signs of
lameness to him, there was evidence from a Ms Mary Connolly, a teacher, who had
known Echo Boy since it was purchased by the Plaintiff and who had attended
seven of the shows in which it had performed with distinction that she had
never noticed any manifestations of lameness in the horse and evidence from a
Mr Gerry Daly, a neighbour of the Plaintiff, who had also known Echo Boy since
the Plaintiff acquired him and had attended nine of the shows at which the
horse had performed with distinction and who also asserted that he had never
noticed any lameness in it. Add to that the certificate of the 8th July, 1992
furnished by Mr Liam Hutch in which he certified that, on that date, he had
examined Echo Boy and had not found any clinical signs of disease, injury or
physical abnormality and the sworn testimony of Mr Henry Wall, a veterinary
surgeon employed by the Royal Dublin Society, who had examined Echo Boy on the
14th July, 1992 and, as a result of that examination, concluded that the horse
was fit and sound and, in particular, was not lame and I am inexorably drawn to
the conclusion that, whatever may have been wrong with Echo Boy when seen by Mr
Wilson on the 18th July, 1992 and when seen by Mr Steele on the 21st July,
1992, it was not lame at the time when it was sold by the Plaintiff to the
Defendant, the Plaintiff had no good reason to suspect that there was anything
physically wrong with it at that time. In this regard, I have little doubt but
that, as a result of the degenerative joint disease discovered by Mr Steele,
the probabilities are that Echo Boy is now lame and will not be suitable as an
event horse for the Defendant's daughter but, that is as it may be, I do not
accept that it was lame at the time that the Plaintiff sold it to the
Defendant. Accordingly, I do not think that the Plaintiff misrepresented the
horse's condition to the Defendant and, in particular, I do not think that
there was any breach of the term of the said agreement that Echo Boy had never
been lame prior to the said agreement for sale. In this regard, I have every
sympathy for the Defendant although I am not convinced that, even had she
arranged for a veterinary examination of Echo Boy at the time of sale, she
would have been any wiser about its condition because she admitted in evidence
that such an examination would not have included an x-ray examination and, as I
interpret Mr Steele's evidence, the degenerative joint disease from which the
horse suffers would only be disclosed from an x-ray examination. As for the
suggestion that Echo Boy suffered from the vice that it was a box walker, there
was, in my opinion, no evidence whatsoever to support that proposition and
therefore, I do not think that there was a breach of the term of the said
agreement of sale that the horse had no vices.
5. Having
regard to the foregoing, I dismiss the Defendant's appeal and affirm the Order
of the learned Circuit Court Judge.