Contract Law Rights
Privity
• If C is a stranger to a contract between A & B, then C must fail legal action
• In a contract between A & B in which C is a beneficiary, the A-B contract contemplates C. C is still a third party, but not a stranger – is actually named in the agreement.
o Beneficiary – the recipient of a benefit under the contract.
o Our system of law treats the third-party beneficiary the same as the third-party stranger.
o 1861 case established this.
o in earlier cases, C coud sue on the contract
o once contract theory evolved, C became a victim of the quest for theoretical purity.
• If A & B form a contract with A working as an agent for C, then C is not a mere third-party beneficiary. C is a party. A is not.
• If A & B have a contract which has not yet been performed (any contract creates private rights – rights are property; choses in action), A has rights against B, and can, if A chooses, “alienate” their rights against B to another party. Can sell or give incorporeal rights (assign).
o C gains the rights to what A assigns C.
o A-C contract. A had rights under the A-B contract, but sold them to C = assignment.
o Question: What rights does C have under the A-B contract? Suppose B breaks the promise – Can C sue?
• Equity will allow C to sue B.
• A is still in the original contract, but so is C. C could sue B, but might have to sue B using A’s name.
• Superficially, case would be A v. B, but would actually be C sueing B. This is how equity works in this situation.
• Now there is a statute in every province which simplifies this situation.
Third A-B-C relationship:
• The trust example
• A & B have a contract (if unperformed, then each have subsisting rights against the other. Rights are property. Choses in action.)
o A may hold the property (the right against B), not for his or her own benefit, but for the benefit of C.
• A – trustee (of contractual rights)
• C – beneficiary of the trust.
• Referred to as cestqui que trust
o If A does not act as a vigilant trustee, sueing B for unperformed actions, then C can unequivocally sue B.
o Here, dealing with property – in the eyes of equity, A’s rights do not belong to A at all. Belong to C. Not suing on basis of contract. Sueing for property. A has legal title, C has equitable title.
New Zealand Shipping Co. Ltd. v. A.M. Satterthwaite & Co. Ltd.
• There was a view that courts do not have the authority to change the privity rule, and says that the onus is on the legislature to change it.
• The tide turned a little in New Zealand Shipping (page 381 onwards)
• House of Lords, though unwilling to change the rule, softened up on recognizing trust and agency to get around the rule.
o Did not change the rule – signalled a softening.
London Drugs Ltd. v. Kuehne & Nagel International Ltd.
Page 385
• Goes much futher than New Zealand Shipping
• Does in private law something that is rarely seen – grapples with the doctrine itself.
• Interesting discussion on the issue addressed by Simonds (not the place of the court to change even judge-created laws).
• SCC addresses the question. Iocobucci J. says that judges can make incremental changes, but not large changes in well-accepted private-law rules.
• Agrees that major changes to this would have to come from legislatures – in Canada, this means each provincial legislature, due to the Constitution.
• Contract between A & B, which agrees that in certain circumstances, B will not sue C. Shield promise. Exemption promise.
o Contrast to contract such as insurance policy where the goal is to confer a benefit on C.
• Limitation of liability clause. C’s defence would be based on the contract between A & B.
o Court reasons that letting C defend itself is less radical than conferring a benefit on C.
• London Drugs is a bailment case.
o The bailee is a corporation – a warehouse.
o Corporations can operate only through human agency – human beings.
o The employees are negligent in handling the bailor’s chattel.
o They are tortfeasors
o The bailor sues the bailee – the human employees of the bailee.
o Page 385 – the liability clause.
• The bailor did not pay the additional charge to cover warehouse liability
• Means, in effect, that the bailor took the risk on themselves.
• In the suit against the employer (the warehouse) the warehouse was covered against liability by this clause, and was liable for only $40.
o What of the employees? Question of whether they were shielded.
o Note:
• 1) The reciprocity objection: would allow a person to sue on a contract when that person could not be sued on the contract.
• Lack of reciprocity
• This is a trad. objection allowing C to sue as a third party.
• 2) A & B contract. One of the rights is to change their contract (though this is sometimes tricky - need consideration). As soon as one says that C acquires a right under A-B contract, that seems to inhibit A & B’s right to alter contracts.
• The law does not allow us to destroy other people’s rights.
o Iacobucci J. addresses these issues.
• Says that rather than trying to find a way around the privity problem, will instead change the doctrine of privity.
• Do not think that he tries to find that the warehouse contracted on the right of its employees.
• Does not find any rel. in privity between the bailor and the bailee’s employees
• Allows the employees to have rights even though they are not in privity
• Says that in an employment situation, when A deals with B, knowing that B has employees, and that the actions can only be carried out by the employees, to give B’s employees certain rights under the A-B contract is not so very radical (should not take the bailor by surprise).
• Much turns on C being an employee of B.
• Paragraph 46, page 395.
o “I am of the view that employees may obtain such a benefit if the following requirements are satisfied…
• limitation of liability clause must, expressly or impliedly extend its benefit to employees
• the employees seeking the benefit of the clause must have been acting in the course of their employment and been performing the very services provided for in the contract between their employer and the plaintiff (customer) when the loss occurred.
o Said that the bailor was promising the bailee that if the bailee’s employees committed a tort, they would be shielded from liability above $40
• ends up (on page 397) saying that by implication, the promise to the bailee covered not just the bailee, but also the employees (note – not saying that the bailor promised the employees – promised the bailee).
• Cannot find the promise expressed – finds it implied.
• Top of 397 – employees were not to benefit? Says the language of the clause means inevitably that the employees were not covered.
• The test of intention here, then, is a very shallow test.
• Believes, on the facts, that when the bailor and bailee did contemplate (though not expressed) that the employees would be shielded from liability.
• In the context of employment, employees can raise defences to lawsuits – the SCC has made an enormous practical and symbolic inroad into the doctrin of privity.
• NOT saying that the employees were parties to the contract – saying they were intended beneficiaries.
• As such, can invoke this defensively as a shield. Still would not allow this to be used offensively.
• The reason courts do not take the trust or agency argument and make them cure-alls is just because they would be cure-alls
Read up to Law Reform Act for next day.
Monday’s class will be review.
Can have another review class on Tuesday – 12:30pm tentatively
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