Termination options: General law or contractual right
Termination options: General law
or contractual right
29 May 2014
In Newland Shipping and Forwarding Ltd v Toba
Trading FZC [2014] EWHC 661 (Comm), 12 March 2014, Leggatt J
considered the interplay between express contractual rights to terminate an
agreement and the rights to terminate that arise under the general law. A party
which has a right to terminate both under a contract and the general law may
exercise both of those rights provided there is no inconsistency in doing so.
If it would be inconsistent to exercise both rights, the party must elect which
right it wishes to exercise. The party seeking to terminate must clearly
communicate which right is being exercised (or that both rights are being
exercised), otherwise the communication may not be sufficiently certain for
there to have been an effective termination.
Background
Newland and Toba entered
into a contract for the sale and carriage of gasoil. Clause 7 of the contract
gave Newland the right to cancel the contract if Toba failed to pay for the
goods within a set period and provided that Toba would be obliged to compensate
Newland for all associated losses. Clause 12 sought to limit Newland and Toba's
liability for loss or damages of any kind, except as expressly provided in the
contract.
Newland
duly shipped the goods and pressed for payment. An extension was agreed by the
parties but Toba still failed to pay. Newland therefore served a notice
purporting to terminate the contract and claimed Toba was liable to compensate
Newland for losses connected with its failure to pay. Toba argued, inter
alia, that Newland had failed to exercise a right to terminate pursuant to
clause 7, but instead had purported to accept an alleged repudiatory breach of
the contract. Toba further argued that if there had been a repudiatory breach
of contract and Newland had accepted that breach, it was not liable to pay the
sums claimed, as clause 12 operated to exclude liability for damages.
Leggatt
J found that Newland had been entitled to terminate the contract under clause 7
and/or in accordance with its rights under the general law to terminate on
account of Toba's repudiatory breach. A key issue was whether Newland's notice
was effective to terminate the contract:
a.
under clause 7;
b.
by way of acceptance of a repudiatory breach; or
c.
as a simultaneous exercise of both forms of termination right.
Inter-play between contractual right to terminate and
termination under the common law
The judge observed that
the "inter-play" between contractual termination rights and
termination rights under the general law was "an area which is not free
from difficulty". He noted that an express termination clause will not
exclude the right to terminate under the general law unless the contract
clearly says so. Leggatt J also confirmed that there is generally no
inconsistency in opting to terminate both on the basis of an express
contractual term and on the basis of a repudiatory breach. So, where both are
available, a party can elect to exercise both at once. However, there may be an
inconsistency in the exercise of these rights if the consequences of their
exercise conflict. In the Dalkia case1, contractual
termination and acceptance of a repudiation would have had "markedly
different consequences" as the former allowed the defaulting party to
retain possession of the energy plant in question (provided it paid a
termination sum) whereas the latter would have entitled the innocent party to
take it back. In these circumstances the judge in Dalkia found
that the single termination notice could not be taken to have produced two
"diametrically opposing consequences" and held that there had
been a contractual termination only.
Therefore
in cases where the consequences of exercising one termination right are
inconsistent with the consequences of exercising the other, the party with the
right to terminate cannot exercise both rights and must elect between them.
Leggatt J, however, made a distinction between these cases and cases where the
consequences of exercising the two rights are merely different, but not
inconsistent. He also emphasised the fact that, if a party does need to make an
election, for that election to be valid he must clearly communicate his choice
to exercise one right rather than the other. In summary:
·
in
cases where the consequences of contractual termination and termination under
the general law are identical, termination will be valid even if the innocent
party declines to specify which right he is exercising;
·
if
the consequences of each termination right are different (but not inconsistent)
termination will only be effective if the innocent party specifies which right
is being exercised, or alternatively specifies that both rights are being
exercised otherwise there is not sufficient certainty for the termination be
effective;
·
where
the consequences of exercising one termination right
are inconsistent with the consequences of exercising the other, the
innocent party must elect between the two rights and must clearly communicate
his choice for termination to be effective.
Newland's termination – consequences were
"different" but not inconsistent
If
Newland had validly terminated under both clause 7 and the general law, then it
would have a right to compensation under clause 7 and would (in principle) also
be entitled to claim damages under the general law (subject to Clause 12).
Leggatt J discussed the consequences of exercising each termination right and
concluded that they were different. The sums that Toba would be obliged to
pay under clause 7 were not the same as the sums that would be recoverable
following termination for repudiatory breach, as clause 12 expressly excluded
any damages that would be available under common law. In fact, the judge noted
that termination for repudiatory breach would "add nothing of value.
But that is no reason why it could not be done". The consequences of
the exercise of the termination rights were therefore different, but in spite
of this the judge still did not consider that they were
necessarily inconsistent. Accordingly, Newland would have been permitted
to exercise both termination rights simultaneously.
Which termination right(s) had Newland exercised?
To
determine whether Newland had exercised its contractual termination right or
its termination right under the general law (or both), the judge considered the
mixed language of Newland's termination notice. In it, Newland stated that it
recognised Toba's breach "as a repudiatory breach" entitling
it to damages. At the same time the notice quoted the salient provisions of
clause 7 and claimed compensation available pursuant to that clause.
Unsurprisingly, Leggatt J held that the explicit references to "repudiatory
breach" and "damages" were a clear exercise of
Newland's right to terminate under the general law. The judge also held that
having quoted the terms of clause 7 (and the specific recovery rights afforded
by that clause), Newland's notice was also a clear exercise of its contractual
termination right. Furthermore, Leggatt J noted that the notice had to be read
against the background of earlier correspondence in which Newland had
threatened to terminate in accordance with clause 7; Newland was only doing what
it had previously threatened to do.
The
judge noted that if, contrary to his view, it was not possible for Newland to
exercise both termination rights concurrently, then by having failed to elect
between the two rights Newland would have failed to validly exercise either.
However, the judge noted that Toba's response to the notice did not treat the
contract as having been terminated; on the contrary it asserted that there had
been no breach and that the contracts remained valid. Moreover, to the extent that
the contract had not already been validly terminated under both bases when the
notice was served, Leggatt J found that a subsequent without prejudice e-mail
sent by Newland (which was expressed to be "formal notice to terminate
the contract as per contractual terms" if settlement was not
forthcoming) was an "unequivocal election" to terminate under
clause 7.
One
way or the other, the judge therefore concluded that Newland had successfully
exercised its termination right and was entitled to compensation in accordance
with clause 7.
Comment:
Parties
are reminded to take care when deciding whether to accept a repudiatory breach
of contract or to use an available contractual termination mechanism. It is
important to determine carefully which methods of termination can be relied
upon and, if more than one is available, whether it is possible to exercise
both consistently or whether an election must be made. Even in cases where
there would be no inconsistency between the consequences of exercising each
termination right, the way in which the rights are exercised must be carefully
considered. It should always be borne in mind that if the consequences of
exercising each right are different, unless both rights are clearly exercised a
judge may well conclude that the innocent party has failed to terminate at all.
The
method(s) of termination to be relied on should therefore be stated clearly and
unambiguously in the termination notice. If there is any doubt as to which
method(s) the innocent party is seeking to rely on then it seems that (in
Leggatt J's view) prior conduct may be used as a guide.
Recipients
of a notice to terminate should likewise carefully assess whether a notice of
termination is an effective exercise of termination rights under the contract
and/or the general law before responding to the notice or taking any other
steps in relation to it.
Footnote:
1
Dalkia Utilities Services plc v Celtech International Ltd [2006] EWHC 63
(Comm).
Further information
This
case summary is part of the Allen & Overy Litigation Review, a monthly
update on interesting new cases and legislation in commercial dispute
resolution. For more information please contact Sarah Garvey
sarah.garvey@allenovery.com, or tel +44 20 3088 3710.
https://www.allenovery.com/en-gb/global/news-and-insights/publications/termination-options-general-law-or-contractual-right
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