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Law of Contract Consideration Part Payment of Debt

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Title: Law of Contract Consideration Part Payment of Debt


1
Law of ContractConsiderationPart Payment of
Debt
2
Part Payment of Debt
  • Pinnels Case (1602)
  • A promise to accept a part payment
  • of a debt, in discharge of the entire
  • debt is not valid consideration

3
Part Payment of Debt
  • example
  • If A owes B a debt of 200, and B agrees to
    accept 100 in full satisfaction of the debt, B
    is not bound by his promise.
  • He may subsequently sue for the full amount of
    his debt.

4
Part Payment of Debt
  • Pinnels Case
  • Facts Cole owed Pinnel 8.50 which was due in
    11th Nov. At Pinnel request, Cole paid 5.11 on
    01st October, which Pinnel accepted in full
    settlement of the debt. Pinnel Sued Cole for the
    amount owed.
  • Held obiter, part payment in itself is not
    consideration.

5
Part Payment of Debt
  • Pinnels case Principle
  • part payment of a lesser sum, on the day
    (that it is due) cannot be any satisfaction for
    the whole because it appears to the judges that
    by no possibility a lesser sum can be
    satisfaction to the claimant for a greater
    sum..

6
Part Payment of Debt
  • Exception to the general rule
  • 1) If the creditor accepts part-payment on an
    earlier date than the due date.
  • 2) If the creditor accepts chattel instead of
    money.
  • 3) If the creditor accepts part payment in a
    different place, at the creditors request, to
    that originally specified.

7
Part Payment of Debt
  • Pinnels case was followed in
  • Foakes v Beer (1884)
  • Held Dr. Foakes had not provided any
    considerationhe had not done or promised to
    do anything that he was not already obliged to
    do.
  • Rule followed in following cases
  • Re Selectmove (1995)
  • Ferguson v Davies (1996)

8
Part Payment of Debt
  • Two exceptional situations where a creditor
    cannot go back on his promise even though
    consideration is absent.
  • 1) Part payment of a debt by a third party.
  • 2) Composition agreements with creditors

9
Part Payment of Debt
  • Part Payment of a Debt by a third party
  • Welby v Drake (1825)
  • Cook v Lister (1863)
  • Part payment by a third party, if accepted by
    the creditor in full settlement of the debtors
    liability is a good defence, to a later action
    by the creditor.

10
Part Payment of Debt
  • Welby v Drake (1825)
  • Facts The defendant owed the claimant 18.
    The claimant accepted 9 from the defendants
    father in full satisfaction.
  • The claimant then sued the defendant.
  • Held The claimant failed because by suing
    his son he was committing a fraud on the father.
  • See also Hirachand Punamchand v Temple (1911)

11
Part Payment of Debt
  • Composition agreements (with creditors)
  • Good v Cheesman (1831)
  • Wood v Roberts (1818)
  • Held A debtor who cannot pay his creditors in
    full, may agree with his creditors, to pay each
    of them dividend and thus lesser sums.
  • If they agreed they then cannot sue the debtor,
    as it would be a fraud on the other creditors.

12
Promissory estoppel
  • Central London Property Trust Ltd v High Trees
    House Ltd (1947)
  • Held Lord Dennings by his ratio, held that
    the claimants were entitled to sue as the rent
    reduction was only meant to apply for the period
    of war.
  • Obiter, he mentioned that the claimants would
    have been estopped in equity if they had made
    the claim during the war.

13
Part Payment of Debt
  • What is Estoppel ?
  • a rule where a person is prevented
  • from denying the existence of facts,
  • which he himself has previously
  • asserted.
  • What is promissory estoppel ?
  • The promissor will be estopped from denying
    the existence of such promises and will not be
    allowed to act inconsistently from any such
    assetions he may have made, as to his future
    conduct.

14
Part Payment of Debt
  • Promissory Estoppel
  • High Trees Principle
  • a promise to accept a smaller sum in
    discharge of a larger sum, if acted upon, is
    binding, notwithstanding the absence of
    consideration

15
Part Payment of Debt
  • Requirements that must be met before doctrine of
    promissory estoppel may be applied.
  • 1) There must be clear and unambiguous
    statement by the promisor that his strict
    legal rights will not be enforced.
  • 2) The promisse must have acted in reliance on
    the promise.
  • 3) It must be inequitable for the promisor to
    back on his promise.

16
Statement that legal rights will not be enforced
  • 1) There must be clear and unambiguous
    statement by the promisor that his strict legal
    rights will not be enforced.
  • The Scaptrade (1983)
  • Hughes v Metropolitan Railway (1877)
  • Statement can be implied or by conduct.

17
Promisee must have acted on reliance
  • 1) Promisee must have acted on reliance on
    the promise.
  • The promisee must have changed his position to
    his etriment,.meaning put in worse position if
    promise is revoked, or altered his position in
    some way.
  • Ajayi v Brisco (1964)
  • The postchaser (1982)

18
Inequitable for promisor to go back on promise
  • The promisor can resile from his promise or
    rather withdraw from his promise, if it is
    equitable.

19
Part Payment of Debt
  • Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel,
  • is a Shield and not a sword
  • Does not allow a new cause of action,
  • where no cause of action existed.
  • Combe v Combe (1951)
  • Held C/A , held that wife gave no
    consideration for the husbands promise,
    therefore she could not succeed.
  • High trees principle was not applied.

20
Promissory estoppel
  • Does doctrine suspend or extinguish the rights
    of the promissor?
  • Tool Metal Manufacturing v Tungsten Electric Co
    Ltd (1955)
  • D C Builders v Rees (1965)
  • Held Creditors may resume strict rights on
    giving notice that they wish to be paid the full
    amount and then allowing a reasonable time for
    the debtor to comply. so principle does not
    extinguish obligations.
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