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High Court of Australia |
H. JONES AND COMPANY PROPRIETARY LIMITED v TALBOT [1948] HCA 30; (1994) 180 CLR 63
Injunction
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
LATHAM CJ(1), STARKE(2), DIXON(3), McTIERNAN AND WILLIAMS(4) JJ
(NOTE: THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE McTIERNAN did not sit on the second day of
this appeal and did not deliver a judgment. - Ed.)
Injunction - Contract - Breach - Sale of goods by description - Specific quantity of produce of farm in any season during currency of agreement - Option to buy excess - Whether implied term not to sell to third party - Damages - Whether adequate remedy.
DECISION
LATHAM CJ This is an appeal from an order of the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Tasmania discharging an order of Hutchins J. whereby his Honour had refused to dissolve an injunction granted against the defendant (the respondent upon this appeal). The injunction restrained the defendant from delivering his fruit crop or any portion thereof to anyone other than the plaintiff so as to put it beyond the defendant's power to perform an agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant on 5 December 1947. The agreement was an agreement contained in a letter consisting of a printed form with conditions attached addressed by the defendant to the plaintiff company, which has a large business in the manufacture of jam and preserved fruits, and was in the following terms:raspberries six tonsShould my crop in any season during the currency of this contract exceed the above stated quantities then you are to have the option of taking the whole or any part of such excess; option to be declared by you on or before the delivery of my first consignment each season.
gooseberries two tons
red currants one ton
black currants two tons
PRICE: Your current daily rates on delivery.(The prices are fixed under law in Tasmania.)
This contract holds good for ten seasons, viz. -
1947 - 48 1952 - 53
1948 - 49 1953 - 54
1949 - 50 1954 - 55
1950 - 51 1955 - 56
1951 - 52 1956 - 57"
2. The option to take the whole or any part of the excess over the quantities
named was not exercised before delivery of the first
consignment in the
relevant season. Accordingly, the contract in this season becomes a contract
to sell specified quantities of raspberries
and the other fruits mentioned,
those fruits to be fruits grown on the property of the defendant. Thus the
contract becomes simply
a contract for the sale of goods by description. It is
not a contract of which specific performance could be ordered under s. 56 of
the Sale of Goods Act 1896 (Tas.). Prima facie, also, an injunction would not
be granted in relation to such a contract. It is sought to construe the
contract
as meaning that the defendant contracts not to sell to any person
other andan the plaintiff raspberries etc. grown by him on hi property.
If
there were such a negative stipulation, then, subject to any considerations as
to the validity of the whole of the contract, an
injunction might be granted
to restrain action inconsistent with such a term. But there is no such
stipulation in the contract. Evidence
is given for the plaintiff by affidavit
that the quantity grown on the defendant's farm in the relevant season was in
fact less than
the amounts contracted to be sold; but this fact does not in my
opinion turn the contract into a contract to sell the whole of the
produce of
the farm to the plaintiff, and accordingly, in my opinion, there is not the
alleged basis to support the argument that
there is an implied negative term
in the contract. Then it is said that in this case damages are not an adequate
remedy because the
plaintiff depends upon regular supply of fruit and has
contracts from a large number of farms in order to keep his factory going.
In
my opinion such a fact does not show (and has not in the past been taken as
showing) that damages are not an adequate remedy.
It amounts only to this -
that goods of the description mentioned in the contract are in short supply.
Such a fact would be reflected
in any damages in normal times. The fixing of
prices does affect that matter, but in my opinion it does not affect the
application
of the general principle. The fixing of prices may limit the
amount of damages recoverable. In my opinion no ground is shown for
grant of
an injunction, and the plaintiff should be left to its remedy in damages for
the net disputed breaches of the contract.
Accordingly in my opinion the
appeal should be dismissed.
STARKE J. I agree that this appeal should be dismissed. I regret that special leave should have encouraged the appellant to pursue an appeal that has no real basis.
DIXON J. I agree
WILLIAMS J. The contract sued on is affirmative in form and not of such a
nature that it could be specifically enforced. It could
only be indirectly
enforced by an injunction if it contains a negative covenant, either express
or implied, and then only to the
extent to which it could be enforced by
granting an injunction in the terms of the covenant. There is here no express
negative covenant.
The contract is affirmative throughout, and I am unable to
find any sufficient indications in the contract itself or the surrounding
circumstances to justify an implication of a negative covenant. The contract
is not one for the sale of the whole of the crop, in
which case it might be
possible to imply a negative covenant, but for certain quantities of fruit,
and even with respect to these
quantities there are two options, one to take
increased quantities by purchasing the whole of the crop, and a further option
to reduce
the specified quantities or to cancel or suspend the contract, in
the event of a shortage of sugar or tinplate at the plaintiff's
factory. In
these circumstances it seems to me to be quite uncertain what would be the
terms of the negative covenant which ought
to be implied, if one ought to be
implied at all; and, as I have already said, I do not think the contract
itself or the circumstances
are such as to justify the court in implying such
a covenant. A mere shortage of goods is not sufficient to make a contract for
such
goods specifically enforceable when it contains terms which require the
supervision of the court. The principle of equity is that
such a contract
cannot be specifically enforced, because the court is unable to supervise it,
and that principle applies whatever
may be the condition of the market with
respect to the supply of the goods. I think the law is well stated in two
decisions of the
Supreme Court of New South Wales. The first is the case of
Wood v. Corrigan (1). Long Innes J. said (2):
"But, however that may be, I think that it is settled by authority that a
negative quality will not be imported into an agreement
which is affirmative
in form and is of such a nature that it cannot be specifically enforced."
2. That case was explained by Harvey J. in Howes v. O'Neill (3). He said:
"That was a case of a contract for sale of definite chattels, or something
in the nature of definite chattels. The court was not
asked to enforce the
specific sale of the chattels, but was asked to grant an injunction to
restrain the defendant from selling them
elsewhere."
(1) (1928) 28 SR (NSW) 492.
(2) ibid., at p. 500.(3) (1930) 30 SR (NSW) 167, at p. 168.
3. That appears to me to be exactly the position here. His Honour went on to
say:
"It is obvious that where it is a contract for the sale of chattels between
two persons and that contract is of a nature that cannot
be specifically
performed, the court will not stultify itself by endeavouring to force the
defendant to specifically enforce the
contract by forbidding him to sell to
somebody else, the court not being able to carry proceedings any further than
to prevent the
defendant from selling the goods. In that case the court ought
not to enforce the principle that an agreement to sell particular
chattels to
a particular person impliedly carries with it an obligation not to sell them
to anybody else."
4. For these reasons I agree that the appeal should be dismissed.
5. Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant, Simmons, Wolfhagen, Simmons and Walch, Hobart,
by Hedderwick, Fookes and Alston.
Solicitors for the respondent, Bruce Piggott and Jennings.
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