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EUT 440 ENGINEERS IN SOCIETY TOPIC 2: CONTRACT LAW LECTURERS: DR. KHADIJAH MOHAMED MDM. ROHIZAN HALIM

EUT 440 ENGINEERS IN SOCIETYportal.unimap.edu.my/portal/page/portal30/Lecture... · Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co.[1892] EWCA Civ 1 The defendant company advertised that a reward

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  • EUT 440

    ENGINEERS IN SOCIETY

    TOPIC 2: CONTRACT LAW

    LECTURERS:

    DR. KHADIJAH MOHAMED

    MDM. ROHIZAN HALIM

  • CONTRACT LAW IN MALAYSIA: BACKGROUND

    English law (common law, equity & statute) forms part of

    the laws in Malaysia and still applicable

    Section 3(1)(a) Civil Law Act 1956 states that courts

    should apply Common Law and the Law of Equity as

    administered in England:

    in Peninsular Malaysia: 7 April 1956.

    in Sabah: 1 December 1951.

    in Sarawak: 12 December 1949

    Section 5(1) Civil Law Act 1956 states that the principles

    of English commercial law apply in Peninsular Malaysia

    except Penang and Malacca in absence of local

    legislations.

    2EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • …BACKGROUND

    The case law related to the boundaries of

    application.

    Jamil Bin Harun v. Yang Kamsiah & Anor [1984] 1 MLJ 217.

    It was decided that courts have the authority to decide

    whether to follow English Law (common law and law of

    equity) or Federal law, considering the circumstances and

    the scope the written law permits to do so.

    Smith Kline & French Laboratories Ltd. v. Salim

    (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd.[1989] 2 CLJ. 228.

    It was held that the courts have the authority to put aside

    any Common Law or Law of Equity which cannot be applied

    in Malaysia.

    3EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • CONTRACT LAW IN MALAYSIA

    Contract law is governed by the Contracts Act (CA)

    1950.

    The Act is a re-enactment of the Contracts (MalayStates) Ordinance 1950.

    Principles of contract originated from England, but theoriginal Ordinance was a reproduction of the IndianContract Act of 1872.

    The functions of the contract law-

    establishes what kinds of promises will be legallybinding.

    supplies procedures for enforcing legally bindingpromises, or agreement.

    4EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • WHAT IS CONTRACT? An agreement between two or more parties that creates

    an obligation to perform (or not perform) a particular

    duty.

    S.2(h) CA 1950 – “an agreement enforceable by law is a

    contract”.

    S.10(1) CA 1950 – „All agreements are contracts if they

    are made by the free consent of parties competent to

    contract, for a lawful consideration and with lawful

    object, and are not hereby expressly declared to be

    void‟.

    All contracts must be built upon an agreement although

    not all agreements are automatically contracts e.g:

    social agreements & domestic agreements.5

    EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • TYPES OF CONTRACT

    Formal vs Informal Contracts.

    Formal, need a seal v informal, simple & without

    seal.

    Unilateral vs Bilateral Contracts.

    Unilateral, a promise on 1 side v bilateral,

    promises on both sides.

    Unilateral: Carbolic Smoke Ball case

    Forms of Contract

    Oral

    Written

    6EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • ELEMENTS OF CONTRACT

    A legally enforceable contract constitutes the

    elements of contract -

    (1) Offer/proposal (I‟ll fix your sink this weekend, if

    you pay me RM50)

    (2) Acceptance (You‟ve got a deal)

    (3) Consideration (The value received and given –

    the money and the sink fixed)

    (4) Intention to create legal relations

    (5) Certainty

    (6) Legal Capacity

    (7) Free Consent7

    EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • ESTABLISHING OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE

    S.2(a) CA 1950: Proposal – “when one personsignifies to another his willingness to do or to

    abstain from doing anything, with a view to

    obtaining the assent of that other to such act or

    abstinence”.

    S.2(b) CA 1950: Acceptance – “when the person towhom the proposal is made signifies his assent

    thereto, the proposal is said to be accepted: a

    proposal, when accepted, becomes a promise”.

    A legally recognized offer and an acceptance creates a

    “meeting of the minds‟, or mutual assent, between

    the parties.8

    EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • EXAMPLE

    Ali wants to sell his car. He makes an offer to sell his

    car to Rahim for RM25,00.00. If Rahim say yes, the

    offer is said to be accepted.

    A person who make an offer is now referred as

    promisor (offeror) and the party accepting the

    proposal as promisee (offeree).

    Once the offer has been made and accepted, it

    becomes a promise or an agreement.

    9EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • TYPES OF OFFER

    Specific: the offer only can be accepted by a person

    who has been offered.

    Boulton v Jones (1857) 2 H & N 564.

    Jones used to have business dealings with Brockle Hurst. He sent an

    order (offer) to Brockle Hurst for the purchase of certain goods. By

    the time the order reached Brockle Hurst, he had sold his business to

    Boulton. Boulton receiving the order sent all the goods to Jones as

    per the order without informing Jones of the changing of the hands

    of the business. When Jones learnt that the goods were not supplied

    by Brockle Hurst, he refused to pay for the goods. His contention

    was that he had never placed an order to Boulton, the offer being

    made to Brockle Hurst, and therefore had no intention to make a

    contract with Boulton. Held: Jones was not liable to pay.

    10EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • …TYPES OF OFFER

    General: the offer is general as it is made to the

    public.

    Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co.[1892] EWCA Civ 1

    The defendant company advertised that a reward of £ 100 would be

    paid to any person who contracted influenza, cold, or any other

    disease associated with cold even after using the smoke balls of the

    company – a preventive remedy, 3 times a day, for 2 weeks in

    accordance with the printed directions. The plaintiff had seen the

    advertisement, used the smoke balls according to the printed

    directions and for a period as specified, but still contracted

    influenza. She sued the defendant company to claim the reward.

    Held: that the advertisement constituted the offer to the whole

    world at large ( – general offer) which was accepted by the plaintiff

    by conduct. ( – by using smoke balls).

    11EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • WHEN IS AN OFFER EFFECTIVE?

    S.4(1) CA 1950 – A proposal/offer is only effective if it is

    communicated to the acceptor.

    3 elements are necessary for an offer to be effective(mutual assent):

    Intention: There must be serious, objective intentionby the offeror to become bound by the offer.

    Non-offer situations include: expressions of opinion,statements of intention, preliminary negotiations &advertisements, catalogues and circulars.

    Definiteness: The terms of the offer must bereasonably certain + definite.

    Communication: The offer must be communicated tothe offeree.

    12EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • OFFER V INVITATION TO TREAT

    „Invitation to treat’ - a sort of preliminary

    communication which passes between the parties at

    the stage of negotiation.

    Advertisement in newspapers, catalogues, circulars &

    display of goods in self-service mall.

    Auction sale.

    Invitations to make offers rather than offers, thus,

    the „advertisor‟ would have several offers to choose

    from and could accept the best one without

    incurring any liability for the rest he/she rejected.

    13EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • TERMINATION OF THE OFFER

    S.6 CA 1950: A proposal is revoked—

    (a) by the communication of notice of revocation by the

    proposer to the other party;

    (b) by the lapse of the time prescribed in the proposal

    for its acceptance, or, if no time is so prescribed, by the

    lapse of a reasonable time, without communication of

    the acceptance;

    (c) by the failure of the acceptor to fulfil a condition

    precedent to acceptance; or

    (d) by the death or mental disorder of the proposer, if

    the fact of his death or mental disorder comes to the

    knowledge of the acceptor before acceptance.

    14EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • ACCEPTANCE

    To establish a contract, the acceptance must be

    communicated to the offeror/promisor.

    Only offeree/agent may accept the offer.

    S.2(b) CA 1950: “when the person to whom the

    proposal is made signifies his assent thereto, the

    proposal is said to be accepted: a proposal,

    when accepted, becomes a promise”.

    15EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • REQUIREMENTS OF ACCEPTANCE

    (1) Acceptance must be unequivocal (absolute and

    unqualified).

    S.7(a) CA 1950: any modification or variation of the proposal does

    not constitute an acceptance but amounts to a counter-proposal

    by the party to whom the original proposal was made).

    Case: HYDE v. WRENCH [1840] 3 Beav. 344 ER 132

    6 June: Def. offered to sell his estate to the Plf. for £100.

    8 June: Plf. replied and made a counter offer to purchase at £950

    (counter-offer), but the Def. refused.

    27 June: Plf. wrote to Def. saying he was prepared to pay the

    original sum demanded.

    Held: no contract existed between them since Plf. had rejected the

    original proposal on 8 June so that he was no longer capable of

    accepting it later.16

    EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • …REQUIREMENTS OF ACCEPTANCE

    (2)Acceptance must be expressed in some usual and

    reasonable manner-

    S.7(b) CA 1950: acceptance must be expressed in some

    usual and reasonable manner, unless the proposal

    prescribes the manner in which it is to be accepted. If

    the proposal prescribes a manner in which it is to be

    accepted, and the acceptance is not made in that

    manner, the proposer may, within a reasonable time

    after the acceptance is communicated to him, insist

    that his proposal shall be accepted in the prescribed

    manner, and not otherwise; but, if he fails to do so, he

    accepts the acceptance.

    17EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • COMMUNICATION OF ACCEPTANCE General rule: acceptance of a proposal must be

    communicated to the proposer/promisor.

    Exception: Postal rule (parties involved are notdealing face to face).

    S.4(2) CA 1950: the communication of an acceptance iscomplete –

    (a) As against the proposer, when it is put in a courseof transmission to him, so as to be out of the powerof the acceptor; and

    (b) As against the acceptor, when it comes to theknowledge of the proposer.

    18EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • CONSIDERATION S.2(d) CA 1950: “when, at the desire of the promisor,

    the promisee or any other person has done orabstained from doing, or does or abstains fromdoing, or promises to do or to abstain from doing,something, such act or abstinence or promise iscalled a consideration for the promise”.

    Consideration is defined as the value given in returnfor a promise.

    Sufficiency & adequacy of consideration.

    Something of legally sufficient value must be given inexchange for the promise; and

    Must be a bargained-for exchange.

    19EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • CONTRACTUAL CAPACITY The legal ability to enter into a contractual

    relationship.

    S.11 CA 1950: Capacity – “every person is competentto contract who is of the age of majority… , andwho is of sound mind, ….”

    Age of Majority Act 1971: the age of majority (adult) in

    Malaysia is18 years.

    S.12(1) CA 1950: „a person is said to be of sound mind

    for the purpose of making a contract if, at the time

    when he makes it, he is capable of understanding it

    and of forming a rational judgment as to its effect

    upon his interest‟.

    20EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • …CONTRACTUAL CAPACITY

    3 types of people who do not have the capacity to enter

    a contract are minors, intoxicated persons and mentally

    incompetent persons.

    Exception of contract by minors: Contracts for necessity;

    scholarship; insurance, and relating to marriage, divorce

    and dower.

    Sound mind:

    (a) A patient in a mental hospital, who is at intervals of sound

    mind, may contract during those intervals.

    (b) A sane man, who is delirious from fever, or who is so drunk

    that he cannot understand the terms of a contract, cannot

    contract whilst such delirium or drunkenness lasts.

    21EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • INTENTION

    2 assumptions of intention-

    Social @ domestic agreements – are not

    intended to create legal relations unless

    proven otherwise.

    Commercial agreements – are intended to

    create legal relations unless proven otherwise.

    22EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • CERTAINTY The terms of an agreement cannot be vague but must

    be certain.

    A agrees to sell to Mary a hundred crates of toys without

    specifying what kind they are; such an agreement is

    void.

    S.30 CA 1950: An agreement which is uncertain is

    void.

    In Karuppan Chetty v. Suah Thian (1916) 1 F.M.S.L.R. 300,

    the contract was held void for uncertainty because the

    parties agreed to lease of $35 per month „for as long as

    he likes‟. The terms are uncertain as the duration of the

    lease is not specified or capable of being made certain.

    23EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • FREE CONSENT

    S.10(1) CA 1950: “agreements are contracts if they are

    made by the free consent of parties competent to

    contract …”

    What constitutes consent?

    S.13 CA 1950: Two or more persons are said to consentwhen they agree upon the same thing in the same sense”.

    S.14 CA 1950 : Consent is said to be free when it is notcaused by:

    (a)Coercion, as defined in s.15

    (b)Undue influence, as defined in s.16

    (c)Fraud, as defined in section 17

    (d)Misrepresentation, as defined in s.18

    (e)Mistake, subject to sections 21,22-23.

    24EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • VOID AND ILLEGAL CONTRACTS For a contract to be valid and enforceable, it must

    be formed for a legal purpose.

    Contracts contrary to public policy?

    Contracts in restraint of trade

    Unconscionable clauses

    Exculpatory clauses – “once broken considered sold”?

    Contract to commit an immoral act & contract thatprohibits marriage.

    A offers a young man RM3000 if he refrains frommarrying A’s daughter. If the young man accepts, nocontract is formed (the contract is void) because it iscontrary to public policy.

    25EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • …VOID AND ILLEGAL CONTRACTS

    Not enforceable by law

    S.24 CA 1950: the consideration or object of an

    agreement is lawful unless:

    forbidden by law

    if permitted, would defeat any law

    fraudulent

    implies injury to a person or property of another

    court regards it as immoral or opposed to public

    policy

    26EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • DISCHARGE OF CONTRACT

    Contract that is otherwise VALID may beunenforceable if the parties have not genuinelyassented to the terms or the contract is not in theproper form.

    Contract discharge-

    Discharge by agreement of the parties ~ byrescission, novation or accord and satisfaction;

    Discharge based on impossibility of performance~by complete performance or inadequateperformance (constitutes a material breach ofcontract).

    27EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • BREACH OF CONTRACT

    Breach of contract is a legal cause of action in which

    a binding agreement is not honored by one or more

    of the parties to the contract by non-performance or

    interference with the other party's performance.

    If the party does not fulfill his contractual promise,

    or has given information to the other party that he

    will not perform his duty as mentioned in the

    contract or if by his action and conduct he seems to

    be unable to perform the contract, he is said to

    breach the contract.

    Breach of contract is a type of civil wrong.

    28EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • REMEDIES S.66 CA 1950: When an agreement is discovered to be

    void, or when a contract becomes void, any person who

    has received any advantage under the agreement or

    contract is bound to restore it, or to make compensation

    for it, to the person from whom he received it.

    A contracts with B to deliver to him 250 gantangs of rice

    before the 1st of May. A delivers 130 gantangs only before

    that day, and none later. B retains the 130 gantangs after

    the 1st of May. He is bound to pay A for them.

    A contracts to sing for B at a concert for RM1,000, which

    are paid in advance. A is too ill to sing. A is not bound to

    make compensation to B for the loss of the profits which B

    would have made if A had been able to sing, but must

    refund to B the RM1,000 paid in advance.29

    EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013

  • …REMEDIES Remedies from the court:

    Damages - to compensate the innocent party for losses suffered as

    result of the contract being breached by the party in breach.

    Compensatory, consequential, punitive, nominal, liquidated.

    Rescission and restitution

    Specific performance - a decree directing a contract orcertain act should be performed specifically according to its

    original terms

    Injunction - An order of court refrain the party to whom it isaddressed from doing a specified act.

    Election of remedies: A common law doctrine under which

    a non-breaching party must choose ONE remedy from

    those available to prevent double recovery.

    30EUT440 LAW 2 KM2013