Misrepresentation and Mistake Cases Flashcards

1
Q

What was the contract in Spice Girls v AWS?

A

○ Aprilia agreed to sponsor a world tour by the spice girls.
Aprilia would be entitled to
the right to sell a limited edition Spice Sonic scooter, access to the Spice Girls for one day to film a television commercial for the Spice Sonic scooter, the right to broadcast the commercial on MTV throughout Europe and the right to promote the Spice Sonic scooter in press advertising.

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2
Q

What did Aprilia make in Italy?

A

Motorbikes.

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3
Q

What did AWS have to pay?

A

£400,000 in three instalments, two were already paid.

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4
Q

What did the group know when signing the contract?

A

The Spice Girls were aware that H was leaving to pursue another career. Aprilia was unaware of this.

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5
Q

What did Aprilia do when discovering Halliwell was leaving?

A

Aprilia refused to pay either the third instalment or the advance against royalties.

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6
Q

What did SGL claim for breach of contract?

A

£212, 500.

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7
Q

What did Aprilia argue was a misrepresentation?

A

Induced into the contract based on the misrepresentation for the united front of the Spice Girls currently comprising the five members.

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8
Q

What did Aprilia argue there was no evidence of?

A

The Spice Girls, outside of Italy, making sales prosper.

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9
Q

Who won the case?

A

Aprilia.

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10
Q

What was AWS entitled to?

A

Damages and to rescind the contract, no longer have to pay the third instalment.

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11
Q

What was the judge Arden J wrong to have done?

A

To have ordered AWS to pay 10% of its own and SGL’s costs of the action.
In these circumstances we dismiss the appeal of SGL and allow the cross-appeal of AWS.

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12
Q

What was the order in Spice Girls case?

A

Appeal dismissed with costs, cross-appeal allowed with costs.

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13
Q

What rule derives from the Spice Girls case?

A

Once made, a representation has a continuing effect. If when it was continuing, the representor found it was now false, they have an obligation to correct it.

Also it was sufficient that the misrepresentation was a material inducement to enter into the contract, it did not have to be the only one.

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14
Q

What was SGL liable to AWS under?

A

s.2(1) Misrepresentation Act 1967.

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15
Q

What was the contract in Raffles v Wichelhaus?

A
  • The claimant R offered to sell 125 bales of Surat cotton to the defendant W. This would be brought to Liverpool by a ship from Bombay, India.
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16
Q

What was Liverpool the port for?

A

Importing raw cotton.

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17
Q

What was the mistake in Raffles v Whichelhaus?

A
  • There were two separate ships both called peelers, both sailed from Bombay and both carried cotton. One sailed in October, the other in December.
18
Q

Which ship did D believe would deliver the cotton?

A

The October ship.

19
Q

Which ship did C believe would deliver the cotton?

A

The December ship.

20
Q

What did D do when the cotton arrived in Liverpool in December?

A

W refused to take his cotton and pay for it because in his mind it was late.
-Claimant R sued the defendant W for breach of contract.

21
Q

What was the decision of the court in Raffles?

A

-The contract was not enforceable.
-No binding contract.
-Mutual mistake.

22
Q

What was the reason for the court’s decision in Raffles?

A

-They were talking in cross-purposes so never met an agreement.
-There was ambiguity about which ship both parties were referring to, a reasonable person would not be able to identify with certainty which ship was agreed upon.

23
Q

What was the contract in With v O’Flanagan?

A

A doctor was selling his house with its associated medical practice.

He reported he was receiving an annual £2000.

24
Q

How was there misrepresentation in Flanagan?

A

The statement of receiving £2000 was true when made, yet there was a long delay before the contract was signed.
The doctor became ill and the patients moved to other doctors. When the contract was signed Flanagan failed to mention how he was down to an average 5l per week.

25
Q

When were the claimants informed of the new circumstances in Flanagan?

A

After the contract was signed.

26
Q

What did the claimants want in Flanagan?

A

Recission on the basis of misrepresentation.

27
Q

What happened when Flanagan died?

A

The action by order of the Court continued against the personal representatives.

28
Q

What was the decision of the court in Flanagan?

A

The Claimants won and appeal was allowed.

29
Q

What is the rule from the Flanagnan case?

A

Once a statement was made inducing the contract, you become responsible for it, so if circumstances change which invalidate the statement, the other party must be informed of this.

30
Q

What was the contract in Bisset v Wilkinson?

A

Agreement to purchase to purchase two adjoining blocks of land at Avondale, in the Southern Island of New Zealand for sheep farming.

31
Q

Did anyone have experience of sheep farming in Bisset?

A

One of the Ds had no experience of farming but the other had, they carefully inspected the lands.

32
Q

Why did the Bisset contract go wrong?

A

When the Ds went into occupation farming they encountered difficulties.

They sought and obtained extensions on their payment to C, but when C requested the money under the agreement they had made, it wasn’t paid.

33
Q

What was the Ds defence in Bisset?

A

They wanted to rescind the contract and claim damages on the ground of the falseness of a statement as to the carrying capacity of the land for sheep.

34
Q

What did C want in Bisset?

A

To recover a sum of money payable to him under agreement for sale and purchase of land.

35
Q

What was the decision in Bisset?

A

The statement was merely of opinion which the vendor honestly held.

The Ds knew more than the C in this case, so Ds could not rely on the opinion of C as a fact.

36
Q

What is the rule in Courtier v Hastie?

A

There must be “an existing something to be sold and bought, and if sold and bought, then the benefit of insurance should go with it.”

37
Q

What was the rule in Esso Petroleum v Mardon?

A

‘Where a special relationship exists, a negligent mis-statement may be not only a breach of contractual warranty, but also an actionable tort as a breach of the duty of care which exists throughout pre-contractual negotiations and which survives the making of the ultimate contract.’

38
Q

What is the findings in Museprime Properties v Adhill Properties?

A
  • The statement does not necessarily have to reasonably induce the other party.
  • One view is that it must be objectively reasonable.
  • The other view is that it must be satisfied on a balance of probabilities that the party was induced.
39
Q

What happened in Salt v Stratstones?

A

A car was brought by Salt from Stratstones as a brand new car, costing £21, 895. Several years later after trouble with the car, he discovered that it had been in an accident before it had been sold to him and subsequently repaired.

40
Q

What was the decision in Salt v Stratstones?

A

C was allowed to rescind and the objection that the car now had so many miles changed what he was returning. This would mean a discount on damages, however the court decided that this did not apply, rather treating the case as if the car had recently been brought.