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High Court of Australia |
LAYBUTT v. AMOCO AUSTRALIA PTY. LTD. [1974] HCA 49; (1974) 132 CLR 57
Contract
High Court of Australia
Menzies(1), Gibbs(2) and Mason(1) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Contract - Option to purchase - Nature of option - Notice of exercise to be given to grantor - Death of grantor - Effect - Notice given to executrix before grant of probate - Estate vested in Public Trustee by statute pending grant - Whether notice of exercise should be given Public Trustee - Option expressed to be exercisable by payment of deposit to agent - No agent named in agreement - Whether grantee authorized to nominate agent for grantor - Payment by deposit to solicitors acting for grantor his successors and assigns - Wills, Probate and Administration Act, 1898 (N.S.W.), ss. 44*, 61**.
* Section 44 of the Wills, Probate and Administration Act 1898 (N.S.W.)
provides: "Upon the grant of probate of the will or administration of the
estate of any person dying after the passing of
this Act, all real and
personal estate which any such person dies seised or possessed of or entitled
to in New South Wales, shall
as from the death of such person pass to and
become vested in the executor to whom probate has been granted or
administrator for
all his estate and interest therein . . . "
** Section 61 provides: "From and after the decease of any person dying testate or intestate, and until probate, or administration, or an order to collect is granted in respect of his estate, the real and personal estate of such deceased person shall be deemed to be vested in the Public Trustee in the same manner and to the same extent as aforetime the personal estate and effects vested in the Ordinary in England."
HEARING
Sydney, 1974, July 30; November 15. 15:11:1974DECISION
November 15.
2. Clause 1 of the option provided:
"1. This option may be exercised by you or your nominee byto
notice in writing handed to *me/one of us on or before 24th Oct 1972
(Insert actual date)
date or within that time posted to *me/one of us by registered mail
the address shown below and by payment to the said Agent
within the said time of the deposit mentioned below.
*Delete words that do not apply and initial." (at p61)
3. Clause 2 of the option provided that upon exercise of the option there was
to be created a contract for the sale of the property
on the terms and
conditions of the contract for the sale of land last issued under the approval
of the Law Society of New South Wales
and the Real Estate Institute of New
South Wales. Although the option contained two spaces in which provision was
made for the insertion
of the name of the vendor's agent, the spaces were not
filled in; indeed, a line was drawn through one space. Clause 2 (a) prescribed
a deposit in an amount equal to ten per cent of the purchase price. (at p61)
4. There was an apparent inconsistency between cl. 1 of the option and cl. 1
of the form of contract incorporated by reference.
The former stipulated
payment of a deposit within three months as an element in the exercise of the
option, whereas the latter provided
for payment of a deposit to an agent as
stakeholder only upon the signing of the contract for the sale of the land.
(at p61)
5. Four days after the grant of the option Harold Laybutt died. Probate of
his will was not granted to his executrix and sole surviving
beneficiary, the
appellant Lily May Laybutt, until June 1973. Having ascertained that the
appellant was appointed executrix by the
will, the respondent served notice of
exercise of the option on Mrs. Laybutt on 23rd October 1972. (at p61)
6. In an attempt to overcome the difficulty constituted by the omission to
name an agent in the option the respondent delivered
a cheque for $4,200 to
Messrs. Maurice Isaacs & Glass, the solicitors acting for the deceased's
estate on the instructions of
the
appellant. The cheque was delivered on 24th
October 1972; it was accompanied by a letter stating that the cheque was for
the
deposit
to be held by the solicitors as stakeholder pending completion of
the purchase under the option. (at p61)
7. The cheque was returned in January 1973 with an accompanying letter from
the solicitors which stated that all negotiations in
connexion with the sale
of the land were terminated. The respondent commenced proceedings in the
Equity Division of the Supreme Court
of New South Wales in which declarations
were made that the option had been properly exercised and that there was an
enforceable
contract, and an order was made for specific performance. It is
from these declarations and the order that the appellant has appealed
to this
Court. (at p62)
8. Although the appellant argued that the option was void for uncertainty
before the primary judge, the argument was not reiterated
in this Court. The
appellant submitted here, first, that the option had not been validly
exercised because payment of the deposit
was made to her solicitors, not to
her, and, secondly, that the option was not capable of being exercised after
the death of the
grantor. Accordingly, the issue which arises on the arguments
which have been put to this Court is not one of uncertainty but one
of
construction. However, it is evident from the terms of the option and the
standard form of contract that the construction of the
documents is closely
associated with the underlying possibility that the option may be void for
uncertainty. (at p62)
9. We begin with the inference drawn by the primary judge "that the parties
deliberately omitted to name an agent", an inference
which was correctly based
on the failure to fill in the two spaces in the option in which appropriate
provision was made for naming
the agent and on the line which had been drawn
through one of the spaces. His Honour went on to say, and this finding was not
challenged,
that it would be wrong to hold that "their agreement should fail
for lack of an agent's name". There is nothing to suggest that the
name of the
agent was omitted so that it would become the subject of some later agreement
between the parties. Apart from the provision
that the deposit be paid to the
agent, it was not a matter on which it was necessary for them to reach a
consensus. In ordinary circumstances
a vendor would have an agent of his
choice acting for him but in this case the grantor had no reason to have
appointed an agent or
to appoint one in the future - that no doubt was the
reason why the name was omitted, the parties overlooking the agent's role as
a
recipient of their deposit under cl. 1. (at p62)
10. For the respondent it was submitted that the option conferred on the
grantor a right to name an agent in which event, but not
otherwise, the
provisions in the option and in the standard form of contract relating to the
payment of a deposit came into operation.
As neither the grantor nor the
appellant had nominated an agent, no deposit became payable, although the
amount of the deposit was
properly to be regarded as forming part of the
balance of the purchase price payable on completion. The reasons for rejecting
this
construction are manifold. The option provided for payment of a deposit,
not to an agent to be nominated by the grantor, but to "the
said Agent", that
is, the agent named in the option. Apart from this consideration the
provisions of the option and the contract
emphasize that the payment of the
deposit was an essential element in the bargain. The option stipulated that
the payment was an
element in the exercise of the option. The contract
provided for payment of the deposit "on the signing of the agreement" - an
obligation
which would be satisfied on the option being exercised - and for
its forfeiture in the event of default by the purchaser (cl. 16).
Finally on
this point it is not easy to read the contract as conforming to the view that
the amount of the deposit was payable on
completion. What was payable on
completion was "the balance of the purchase price", an expression which means
the purchase price
less the deposit. (at p63)
11. An alternative submission was that, even if the omission to name an agent
did not affect the operation of the provisions contained
in the standard form
of contract respecting the deposit, it had the consequence that payment of the
deposit was not a necessary element
in the exercise of the option. This view
was based on the proposition that the stipulation for the payment of the
deposit was tied
to payment to the vendor's agent and that to dispense with
the naming of the agent was to dispense with payment of the deposit as
a means
of exercising the option. However, it is one thing to say that the failure to
name an agent shows that it was not intended
that payment should be made to an
agent and quite another thing to say that the parties did not intend the
payment of the deposit
to be an essential element in the exercise of the
option. Clauses 1 and 2 (a) of the option made explicit provision in this
regard.
The omission of the agent's name enables one to conclude that
references in the option and the contract to the agent should be disregarded
and that payment was not to be made to the agent, but it does not justify a
total disregard of the provision for payment of the deposit.
There is here
insufficient foundation for an inference that the parties intended that the
option could be exercised by notice only,
without payment of the deposit (cf.
Fitzgerald v. Masters [1956] HCA 53; (1956) 95 CLR 420 ). (at p63)
12. What then is the effect of cl. 1 of the option and cl. 1 of the contract?
Is the option void for uncertainty? Should the two
clauses be read as
requiring payment to the grantor, his successors and assigns, or to a person
nominated as the appellant's agent
by the respondent as his Honour held? We
have already indicated that this is not a case in which the parties intended
to agree on
the identity of an agent in the future; nor was it a matter on
which it was essential for the parties to agree, putting to one side
the
effect of cl. 1 of the option and cl. 1 of the contract. If the option is void
for uncertainty it is because the provisions for
payment of the deposit in the
option and the contract are meaningless. The references to "the said Agent" in
cl. 1 of the option
and to "the Vendor's Agent herein named as stakeholder" in
cl. 1 of the contract are meaningless, but this does not mean, as Denning
L.J.
pointed out in Nicolene Ltd. v. Simmonds (1953) 1 QB 543, at p 551 , that the
whole option is a nullity. There the meaningless
clause was rejected and the
contract shorn of the clause was held to stand. The clause in question was an
exempting condition but
the principle then applied is not limited to
conditions of that kind. It may be applied to words in a contract, at least
when as
here it appears that the parties intended to exclude them and they are
severable. (at p64)
13. The question remains whether the meaning of the provisions contained in
the two clauses can be determined with a reasonable
degree of certainty. The
primary judge, influenced by the presence of the words "as stakeholder" in cl.
1 of the contract, thought
that the parties intended that payment should be
made to a third person who nevertheless was intended to have the character of
the
vendor's agent. He held that the respondent could nominate a person to act
as agent of the vendor, subject to a right (which in the
event was not
exercised) in the appellant to object to that nomination. (at p64)
14. There are to our minds various reasons why this approach cannot be
supported. First, it rests on the view that the option and
the contract
contemplated, in the absence of an existing nomination of an agent, a
subsequent nomination of such a person. However,
the two documents must be
read together. So read they refer to the payment of one deposit. Once this is
accepted there is no basis
for giving the expression "the Vendor's Agent
herein named" in cl. 1 of the contract an effect different from that accorded
to "the
said Agent" in cl. 1 of the option. The deliberate omission to name an
agent in the option relates to the contract as well as the
option; in each
case it indicates an intention to dispense with the notion of payment to an
agent rather than an intention to reserve
a right to nominate such a person at
a later date. Secondly, we can find no support for the view that, in the
absence of authority
conferred in that behalf, it is permissible for a
purchaser to appoint an agent for the vendor. The observations of Griffith
C.J.
in Christie v. Robinson [1907] HCA 19; (1907) 4 CLR 1338, at p 1347 , and Fenton v.
Browne (1807) 14 Ves Jun 144 (33 ER 476) go,
not to the appointment
of an
agent, but to the responsibility of one party in the event that a stakeholder,
objected to by the other
party, afterwards defaults.
Thirdly, the
qualification that the other party has a right to object to the nomination is
productive
of difficulties too numerous
to be mentioned. (at p64)
15. For our part we would read the two clauses as making provision for the
payment of the deposit to the grantor, his successors
and assigns. The case,
so it seems to us, is one in which there is a stipulation that a deposit shall
be paid, but there is no identification
of the person to whom it is to be
paid. In such a case it is to be implied that payment will be made to the
other contracting party,
his successors and assigns, assuming that the option
is not personal to the grantor. The words "as stakeholder" in cl. 1 of the
contract
are not an obstacle to this conclusion. They were intended to govern
the character in which a vendor's agent would receive the money;
they must be
disregarded along with the words to which they relate. (at p65)
16. A payment made to A's solicitor for A may be said to constitute a payment
made to A if the solicitor is authorized by A to receive
the payment. In this
case, by reason of the provisions of ss. 44 and 61 of the Wills, Probate and
Administration Act, 1898 (N.S.W.), as amended, there is a question as to
whether the option could be exercised by giving notice and paying the deposit
to
the Public Trustee in whom the grantor's estate was deemed to be vested
pending a grant of probate or to the appellant on the footing
that she was an
executor de son tort and that her title by virtue of the subsequent grant
related back to the date of death of the
grantor. We shall assume, without
answering this question, that the appellant was the person to whom in the
circumstances notice
was correctly given and payment should have been made, no
suggestion having been made that the payment to the solicitors was made
to
them on behalf of the Public Trustee or that he had ever authorized them to
receive such a payment. (at p65)
17. There is no evidence that Messrs. Maurice Isaacs & Glass, the solicitors
appointed by the appellant to act for the estate
in
connexion with the grant
of probate, were expressly authorized by her to receive the deposit on behalf
of the estate. The retention
for three months by the solicitors of the deposit
might, however, be sufficient to found an inference that they had been so
authorized.
It is an issue to which the primary judge did not direct his
attention as he took a different view of the case. Even so, a finding
for the
respondent on this issue would not be enough to carry the day in its favour
for it is apparent on the evidence that the deposit
was paid to the
solicitors, not on terms that they were to account to the appellant or the
estate, but that they were to hold it
"as stakeholder, pending completion of
the purchase under the said Option", to quote from the respondent's letter of
24th October
1972 to the solicitors. The payment, accordingly, was not a
payment to the grantor, his successors and assigns, which in the view
we take
was what the option required. (at p65)
18. On this footing the respondent failed to exercise the option in
accordance with cl. 1 of the option. (at p65)
19. On this ground, without expressing any opinion on the other questions
which were argued, we would allow the appeal. (at p65)
GIBBS J. This is an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of New South
Wales in its Equity Division by which it was declared
that an option granted
by Harold Ernest Laybutt (since deceased) to the respondent company to
purchase property described as 143
Newton Road, Blacktown, was duly and
properly exercised, that by reason of the exercise of the option there was
created between the
respondent and the estate of the late Harold Ernest
Laybutt an agreement for the sale of that property by the estate to the
respondent
on the terms set out in the option and that the said agreement is
valid and enforceable and ought to be specifically performed, and
by which it
was decreed accordingly and consequential orders were made. (at p66)
2. On 24th July 1972 Harold Ernest Laybutt, who was then the owner of the
property at 143 Newton Road, Blacktown, signed a document
headed "OPTION TO
PURCHASE" which was addressed to the respondent Amoco Australia Pty.Ltd. This
document was a printed form which
had been completed, with some additions in
handwriting; however, not every space in the form had been filled in and not
all inappropriate
words had been crossed out. Its provisions, so far as they
are presently material, are as follows:
"IN CONSIDERATION of the sum of Ten dollars paid to me/us by
you (the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged) I/We
HAROLD ERNEST LAYBUTT GRANT to you or your nominee an
option to purchase from me/us the below described property for
the sum of Forty Two Thousand dollars ($42,000) which sum
shall include commission (payable to the above-named agent as
at the Scale approved by the Real Estate Institute of New South
Wales) upon the following terms and conditions:
1. This option may be exercised by you or your nominee byOct.1972
notice in writing handed to *me/one of us on or before 24th
(Insert actual date)deposit.
or within that time posted to *me/one of us by registered mail
the address shown below and by payment to the said Agent
within the said time of the deposit mentioned below.
2. The exercise of the option shall create a contract between
me/us and you or your nominee for the sale of the said property
on the terms and conditions of the Contract for the Sale of Land
last issued under the approval of the Law Society of New South
Wales and the Real Estate Institute of New South Wales
completed with the following details:
(a) The deposit shall be ten dollars per centum of the
purchase price, the sum now paid as consideration for
this option *to be/not to be credited as part of such
. . . . . .
(e) The Second Schedule of the said contract is to be
deemed to have inserted therein the correct
information as at the date hereof. The Fourth Schedule to
have annexed thereto *the attached Sec. 342AS
Certificate, or *Paragraph 17 of the Contract for Sale and
Fourth Schedule thereto shall be deemed deleted and
the Purchaser shall be deemed to have satisfied himself
as to all matters relating to Town Planning and zoning
of the subject land.
Such information as to the correct matter in relation to
either or both schedules (as the case may be) to be obtained
or deemed obtained by you prior to the exercise of this
option.
. . . . . .
5. Special conditions
The following special conditions will be included in the
Contract for Sale referred to in paragraph 2 hereof:-
(a) The balance of purchase price shall be paid in cash on
completion in exchange for a duly executed
conveyance or registerable transfer to the purchaser of the
fee simple title of the said property free from all
encumbrances, mortgages, charges, easements
covenants, restrictions and conditions whatsoever together
with all documents of title related to the said property.
. . . . . . " (at p67)
3. In the margin, opposite to cl. 2, appeared the following: "*Delete words
that do not apply and initial", but no deletions were
made in par, (e) of cl.
2. (at p67)
4. Although the opening words of the option refer to "the above-named agent",
and cl. 1 speaks of "the said Agent", no agent was
named in the document; the
form, in two places, had the words "Vendor's Agent" with spaces after those
words in which it was intended
that the name of the agent should be written
but nothing was written there; on the contrary, a line was drawn through each
space.
In fact no agent had been employed by Mr. Laybutt in connexion with the
transaction. (at p67)
5. It was common ground that "the terms and conditions of the Contract for
the Sale of Land" mentioned in cl. 2 of the option were
those set out in the
1972 edition of the form of Contract for Sale of Land issued under the
approval of the Law Society of New South
Wales and the Real Estate Institute
of New South Wales which was in circulation before the date on which the
option was signed. The
only provisions of that form which it is necessary to
mention are the following:
"1. The Purchaser shall upon the signing of this agreement
pay as a deposit to the Vendor's Agent herein named as
stakeholder the sum of
($ )
which shall vest in the Vendor upon and by virtue of completion
and which shall be accounted for to the Vendor upon receipt of
an order from the Purchaser or his Solicitor authorising such
payment. The deposit may be paid by cheque but if the cheque is
not honoured on presentation the Purchaser shall immediately
and without notice be in default under this agreement.
The balance of the purchase price shall be paid as stipulated
in the First Schedule hereto. Any moneys payable to the Vendor
hereunder by the Purchaser or the Agent shall be paid to the
Vendor's Solicitor or as he may direct in writing."
"16. If the Purchaser defaults in the observance of performance
of any obligation imposed on him under or by virtue of this
agreement the deposit paid by him hereunder, except so much of
it as exceeds 10% of the purchase price, shall be forfeited to the
Vendor who shall be entitled to terminate this agreement and
thereafter either to sue the Purchaser for breach of contract or
to resell the property as owner and the deficiency (if any) arising
on such resale and all expenses of and incidental to such resale
or attempted resale and the Purchaser's default shall be
recoverable by the Vendor from the Purchaser as liquidated
damages provided that proceedings for the recovery thereof be
commenced within 12 months of the termination of this
agreement. The Vendor may retain any money paid by the
Purchaser on account of the purchase other than the deposit
money forfeited under this clause as security for any deficiency
arising on a resale or for any damages or compensation
(including any allowance by way of occupation fee or for rents or
profits from a Purchaser who has been in possession of the
property or in receipt of the rents or profits thereof) awarded to him
for the Purchaser's default provided that proceedings for the
recovery of such damages or compensation be commenced
within 12 months of the termination of this agreement."
"17. Should it be established that at the date of this
agreement the property was affected by any one or more of the
following:
(a) any provision of any planning scheme, whether
prepared or prescribed, or any interim
development order made under the provision of the Local
Government Act, 1919;
(b) any Residential District Proclamation under
Section 309 of the Local Government Act, 1919;
(c) any proposal for realignment widening siting or
alteration of the level of a road or railway by any
competent authority;
(d) any mains or pipes of any water sewerage or
drainage authority passing through the property;
(e) any provisions of or under the Mines Subsidence
Compensation Act, 1961;
(f) **
*
in any manner other than as disclosed in the Fourth ScheduleThere was a sidenote to par. (f) as follows:
hereto, then the Purchaser shall be entitled to rescind this
agreement but shall not be entitled to make any other objection
requisition or claim for compensation in respect of any such
matter. Any right of the Purchaser to rescind under this clause
shall be exercised by notice in writing given to the Vendor prior
to completion. In relation to paragraph (c) hereof, the property
shall be deemed to be affected by a proposal if the Purchaser
produces a written statement of the authority concerned, the
substance of which is other than that the property is not affected
by any proposal of the authority."
"**Any other matters.The 4th Sch. (to which there was a sidenote "Delete if not applicable.") read as follows: "The property is affected as shown in the copy certificate under Section 342AS of the Local Government Act, 1919, annexed hereto." Of course, no such certificate was annexed to the form of contract issued by the Law Society and the Real Estate Institute and no certificate had been annexed to the option. (at p69)
*desired to be disclosed in the Fourth Schedule."
6. Mr. Laybutt died on 28th July 1972, leaving a will by which he appointed
the appellant, his widow, to be his sole executrix and
beneficiary. Probate of
this will was not granted until sometime in June 1973. (at p69)
7. The respondent had not exercised the option before Mr. Laybutt's death.
After his death the respondent, on 30th August 1972,
lodged a caveat against
the title to the land but did nothing in an attempt to exercise the option
until 20th October 1972. On that
day a director of the respondent signed two
notices, each addressed to "The Executors, Estate late H.E. Laybutt"; the
notices, which
were identical in substance, stated that the respondent thereby
exercised the option. One of these notices was on 20th October 1972
posted to
the executors, c/- Messrs. Maurice Isaacs & Glass, the solicitors for the
appellant; the other was on 23rd October
1972
handed to the appellant herself
at 143 Newton Road, Blacktown. On 24th October an employee of the respondent
delivered to Messrs.
Maurice Isaacs & Glass a letter addressed to that firm
which referred to the purported exercise of the option and said: "We .
. .
have pleasure in enclosing our cheque for $4,200 deposit to be held by you as
Stakeholder, pending completion of the purchase
under
the said Option." With
the letter was enclosed a cheque for $4,200 payable to the order of "Maurice
Isaacs & Glass Trust
Acc.". There
is no evidence or suggestion that any member
of that firm of solicitors had been authorized by the deceased or by the
appellant or,
if it matters, by the Public Trustee, to receive payment of the
deposit. The cheque was held for some time without
acknowledgment
but finally
on 19th January 1973 Messrs. Maurice Isaacs & Glass returned the cheque to the
respondent with a letter
stating that
the option had not been properly
exercised and asking for the withdrawal of the caveat. (at p70)
8. In these circumstances the respondent's claim to be entitled to specific
performance of a contract to sell the land depended
upon the following
questions all of which were answered by the learned primary judge favourably
to the respondent:
1. Could the option still be exercised notwithstanding the death of the
grantor?
2. If so, was the notice in writing which was necessary to exercise the
option properly given to the appellant as executrix of
the deceased although
probate had not been granted to her when the notice was given?
3. Did the option provide with sufficient certainty for payment of the
deposit, and if so, was payment to the solicitors sufficient
to satisfy its
requirements?
4. If the option was validly exercised, were the terms of the agreement so
uncertain that there was no binding contract? (at p70)
9. The question whether an option to purchase land may be exercised after the
death of the grantor does not appear to be the subject
of much authority. When
I use the expression "option to purchase" throughout the present judgment I
intend to refer to such an option
granted inter vivos and for valuable
consideration. The only decision to which we were referred which is directly
on the point is
Kennewell v. Dye (1949) Ch 517 . In that case a lease
contained a provision in the following terms: "It is further hereby agreed
and
declared that the said (landlord) will sell to the said (tenant) the property
for the sum of 350 pounds; subject to the said
(tenant) giving to the said
(landlord) three months' notice of his intention for so doing". After the
death of the landlord the tenant
gave to the landlord's personal
representative notice in writing of his intention to exercise the option. It
was held that the tenant
was entitled to specific performance. Roxburgh J.
relied (1949) Ch, at pp 521-522 upon the following statement of the law
contained
in Williams on Executors, 12th ed. (1930), at p. 1126:
"The executors or administrators so completely representHe went on to say that only two things would prevent the burden of the option from devolving on the grantor's personal representative, first, if upon its true construction it was not intended to do so and secondly, if the contract was personal to the grantor. He further held (1949) Ch, at p 523 that where the burden of a covenant devolves on a personal representative notice which the covenant requires to be given to the deceased "can and ought to be given to his personal representatives". It would appear that Roxburgh J. regarded the provision granting the option as a contract to sell the property subject to the necessary notice being given, and if this view was correct the conclusion reached was, with respect, plainly right. Authority is not needed for the proposition that, as a general rule, upon the death of a party to a contract his liabilities thereunder pass to his personal representatives. This rule will not apply if the performance of the contract depended upon the personal skill or judgment of the deceased party or if the contract otherwise revealed an intention that it should be enforceable only against that party personally. If it is correct to regard an option to purchase as a conditional contract of sale there is no reason why the ordinary principle as to the effect of death on contractual liabilities should not apply. (at p71)
their testator or intestate, with respect to the liabilities above
mentioned, that every bond, or covenant, or contract of the
deceased (not being a contract personal to the deceased)
includes them, though they are not named in the terms of it; for
the executors or administrators of every person are implied in
himself."
10. However, there is what Dixon C.J. in Braham v. Walker [1961] HCA 7; (1961) 104 CLR 366,
at p 376 called a "standing controversy"
as to the
true nature of an option to
purchase. One view is that an option to purchase is "a contract for valuable
consideration,
viz., to
sell the property (or whatever the subject matter may
be) upon condition that the other party shall within the stipulated
time bind
himself to perform the terms of the offer embodied in the contract": per
Griffith C.J. in Goldsbrough, Mort & Co. Ltd.
v. Quinn [1910] HCA 20; (1910)
10 CLR 674, at p
678 . The other view is that "an option given for value is an offer, together
with
a contract that the offer will
not be revoked during the time, if any,
specified in the option": per Latham C.J. in Commissioner
of Taxes (Q.) v.
Camphin [1937] HCA 30; (1937)
57 CLR 127, at p 132 . This difference of opinion is reflected
in the judgments in
Carter v. Hyde [1923] HCA 36; (1923) 33 CLR 115 , where it was
held that
the personal representatives of the grantee of an option
to purchase a lease
were, upon giving notice in writing as required
by the option, entitled to
specific performance of a contract
of sale. In that case the option took the
form of an offer coupled
with a promise not to revoke it (1923) 33 CLR, at p
119 . The
majority of the Court treated the option as being, in effect, a
conditional
contract of sale: Knox C.J. said (1923) 33 CLR, at p
120 : "In
effect it amounts to an agreement by the appellant to sell the lease,
&c., for
$3,000 to Hyde if within three months
the latter signifies his assent to
purchase." Higgins J. (1923) 33 CLR, at p 128 expressed
the same view. Their
judgments are consistent
with and support the decision in Kennewell v. Dye
(1949) Ch 517 . The third member
of the Court, Isaacs J., took a different
view;
he said (1923) 33 CLR, at p 123 that the words of the document in
question placed
it "within the category of an offer created by
a contract and
irrevocable, and not in the category of an instant sale of the property
as it
then stood, subject to a subsequently
performed condition". However, he held
that the option created a proprietary right which
passed on the death of the
grantee to his
personal representatives. Higgins J. agreed with this reasoning
also; he said (1923) 33
CLR, at p 132 : "The position may be regarded
in
either of two aspects - contract and property; and in either aspect the result
is
the same, that the executors may sue." However,
where it is the grantor,
not the grantee, who has died the result may not be the
same in either aspect.
If there is a conditional
contract for sale, the personal representatives of
the grantor are bound by it,
subject to the qualifications mentioned. If there
is no such contract, but the grantee has a proprietary right, it does not
necessarily
follow that the right is enforceable against
the personal
representatives of the grantor. If the grant of an option amounts to an
offer
to sell coupled with a contract not to
revoke the offer, the question will
arise whether in spite of that contract the offer
will lapse on the death of
the offeror. In
considering this matter, it would be necessary to decide
whether an offer lapses upon
the death of the offeror, at least if the offeree
has notice of the death - a proposition which, as Blackburn J. pointed out in
Fong
v. Cilli (1968) 11 FLR 495, at p 498 , "has been
repeatedly stated in a
dogmatic form (for example, by Mellish L.J. in Dickinson
v. Dodds (1876) 2 Ch
D 463, at p 475 ), and is accepted
in the textbooks, though it is hard to find
a decision on the point" - and
if that is true as a general rule whether, as
Denning
L.J. suggested in Errington v. Errington (1952) 1 KB 290, at p 295 the
position
will be different if the offer was one which could
not have been
revoked during the lifetime of the offeror. (at p73)
11. Dicta abound in favour of both of the contending views as to the nature
of an option to purchase, but it has usually proved
immaterial which view was
adopted. An option to purchase may assume various forms - it may be expressed
as an agreement to sell upon
condition (as in Kennewell v. Dye (1949) Ch 517
), or as an offer together with an agreement not to revoke it (as in Carter v.
Hyde
[1923] HCA 36;
(1923) 33 CLR 115 ) or as the grant of an option so called (as in the
present case). Although it may be undesirable
that these differences
in form
should lead to different consequences, when the result intended to be
effectuated is the same, it
is unnecessary, in the
present case, to consider
whether one form of option is different in nature from another; we are
concerned
only with an option of
the third kind. The Australian cases in which
the nature of options to purchase have been discussed were reviewed
in Ballas
v. Theophilos
(1958) VR 576, at pp 578-581 , by Smith J. who advanced cogent
reasons in favour of the view that an option
similar in form to that
in the
present case is a conditional contract of sale. His judgment was affirmed on
appeal to this Court,
but it was not thought
necessary to resolve this
question: Ballas v. Theophilos (No. 2) [1957] HCA 90; (1957) 98 CLR 193, esp at
pp 207-209 .
More recently, in two cases
in the Equity Division of the Supreme Court of New
South Wales, it has been held that an
option of that kind constitutes an
irrevocable
offer rather than a conditional contract: Johnson v. Bones (1970)
1 NSWR 28, at pp
36-37 ; Westminster Estates Pty. Ltd. v. Calleja
(1970) 1
NSWR 526, at pp 530-531 . In England there is a similar conflict of opinion.
In Griffith v. Pelton (1958) Ch 205, at p 225
, Jenkins L.J., delivering the
judgment of the Court of Appeal, described an option
to purchase land as "a
conditional contract for
such purchase by the grantee of the option from the
grantor, which the grantee is
entitled to convert into a concluded contract of
purchase, and to have carried to completion by the grantor, upon giving the
prescribed
notice and otherwise complying with the conditions
upon which the
option is made exercisable in any particular case". In Beesly v.
Hallwood
Estates Ltd. (1960) 1 WLR 549, at pp 555-556
, Buckley J. declined to follow
those dicta, which he regarded as at variance
with what had been said in Helby
v. Matthews (1895)
AC 471, at pp 477, 479-480 , and held that an option to
renew a lease did not
constitute a contract, but constituted an offer to
grant
a further term which the lessor was contractually precluded from withdrawing
so long as the option remained exerciseable. His
decision was affirmed in the
Court of Appeal but on grounds that did not involve
a decision on this point -
Beesly v. Hallwood Estates
Ltd. (1961) Ch 105 - and his view of the nature of
an option was accepted
as correct by Plowman J. in In re Button's Lease (1964)
Ch 263, at pp 270-271 . In Helby v. Matthews (1895) AC 471 it was decided
that a hirer who had an option to buy the goods hired
was not "a person having
agreed to buy goods" within s. 9 of the Factors Act
1889 (U.K.). It is easy to
see that the hirer, who was
free to buy or not as he pleased, could not be
said to have agreed to buy
the goods within the meaning of the statute.
However, Lord
Herschell L.C., in rejecting the view expressed in the Court of
Appeal
that the owner of the goods had agreed to sell them, and that
this
connoted an agreement by the hirer to buy them, said (1895) AC,
at p 477 :
"This is undoubtedly true if the words 'agreement to sell' becertain
used in their strict legal sense; but when a person has, for
valuable consideration, bound himself to sell to another on
terms, if the other chooses to avail himself of the binding offer,
he may, in popular language, be said to have agreed to sell,
though an agreement to sell in this sense, which is in truth
merely an offer which cannot be withdrawn, certainly does not
connote an agreement to buy, and it is only in this sense that
there can be said to have been an agreement to sell in the present
case." (at p74)
12. Lord Watson (1895) AC, at p 480 , also said that the owner of the goods
"was in exactly the same position as if he had made
an offer to sell on
certain terms, and had undertaken to keep it open for a definite period"; he
added that the owner's obligation
was "nothing more than a binding offer to
sell". These remarks do of course support the view later taken by Buckley J.
and by Plowman
J., but they did not receive the concurrence of all of the
members of the House of Lords, and cannot be regarded as expressing the
ratio
decidendi of that case. Lord Macnaghten, although agreeing with the conclusion
that the hirer had not agreed to buy, said that
"the contract . . . on the
part of the dealer was a contract of hiring coupled with a conditional
contract or undertaking to sell"
(1895) AC, at p 482 . Lord Shand may have
been of the same opinion; he said that "although there was an obligation to
sell if the
hirer should avail himself of the right of option to purchase,
there was no obligation or agreement to purchase" (1895) AC, at p
484 . Lord
Morris expressed no opinion on the matter. Helby v. Matthews (1895) AC 471
contains weighty dicta on both sides of the
controversy, but does not settle
the question what is the nature of an option to purchase. (at p74)
13. There are two other cases in which it was held that an option to purchase
is a conditional contract, and which may be mentioned
because a different
result might have been reached if the option had been treated as an
irrevocable offer. The earlier of these decisions
is Weeding v. Weeding (1861)
1 J & H 424 (70 ER 812) . In that case the testator made a will devising his
real estate on certain
trusts and bequeathing the residuary personal estate on
different trusts. Thereafter he entered into a contract giving an option
of
purchase over part of the real estate, which option was exercised after his
death. It was held that the property was converted
from the date of the
exercise of the option and went to the residuary legatees. Page Wood V-C. said
(1861) 1 J & H, at pp 430-431
(70 ER, at p 815) : "I cannot agree with the
argument that there is no contract. It is as much a conditional contract as if
it depended
on any other contingency than the exercise of an option by a third
person, such as, for example, the failure of issue of a particular
person." In
Re Mulholland's Will Trusts (1949) 1 All ER 460 , the testator had demised
property to a bank for a term and by the lease
had given the bank an option to
purchase. By his will the testator appointed the bank to be one of his
executors and trustees. After
the deceased's death the bank exercised the
option. It was objected that the bank, as trustee, could not purchase the
property and
in support of this argument it was said that "the option here
amounted to no more than an offer by the testator which, as consideration
had
passed, could not be withdrawn; that, if the option should be exercised, the
offer would be accepted and a contract to purchase
would spring into
existence; but that at the date of that contract the fiduciary relationship
had come into existence and, therefore,
the bank was not entitled effectively
to exercise the option", (1949) 1 All ER, at p 464 . This argument was
rejected by Wynn-Parry
J. who held that the notice exercising the option did
not lead to the creation of any fresh contractual relationship between the
parties; since the only contractual right had been created before the
fiduciary duty arose, the bank, notwithstanding its acceptance
of the
executorship and trusteeship of the testator's will, was entitled to exercise
the option. (at p75)
14. If this question were to be decided upon authority, it might be thought
that in Australia the decision in Carter v. Hyde [1923]
HCA 36; (1923)
33 CLR 115 established
that even an option which has the form of an irrevocable offer is in substance
a conditional
contract. If
the question is approached from the point of view
of principle, there are several reasons which in my opinion lead to
the same
conclusion,
although as I have already said I need not consider whether the
position will be different if the option takes
the form of an offer
coupled
with a contract not to revoke it. In the first place, it is clear that the
option itself creates an
equitable interest in
the land to which it relates:
see London & South Western Railway Co. v. Gomm (1882) 20 Ch D 562, at pp
580-581 ; Carter v. Hyde (1923)
33 CLR, at pp 125, 132 ; Commissioner of Taxes
(Q.) v. Camphin (1937) 57 CLR, at pp 132-134 ; In
re Button's Lease (1964) Ch,
at
p 271 , to cite only some of the authorities. An equitable interest cannot
be created by a mere offer;
it is necessary to find a
contract which gives the
grantee a right to call for a conveyance of the land. Of course, on either
view
of the nature of an option,
there is a contract, but it seems very
artificial to treat a contract which does no more than provide
that an offer
shall not be
revoked as giving the party to whom the offer is made a right to
call for a conveyance of the land and
an equitable interest in it.
On the
other hand, a conditional contract to sell the land would clearly create a
contingent equitable
interest in the land. (at
p76)
15. Moreover, it is established by Goldsbrough, Mort & Co. Ltd. v. Quinn [1910] HCA 20;
(1910) 10 CLR 674 that the grantee
of an option may effectually
exercise it
notwithstanding that the grantor has purported to revoke it. If the only
contract were not
to revoke the offer, a wrongful
revocation would entitle the
grantee to damages for breach of contract but it might well be thought
that
once revoked, whether wrongfully
or not, it could not thereafter be accepted.
It is also difficult to see how it would be possible
to grant specific
performance of
a contract not to revoke an offer, after the offer had already
been revoked. In Goldsbrough, Mort
& Co. Ltd. v. Quinn, Isaacs J.
(1910) 10
CLR, at p 691 , and, as an alternative to the primary reason for his decision,
O'Connor
J. (1910) 10 CLR, at p 686 held
that the law will treat the wrongful
revocation as ineffectual. Since there is certainly no general
principle that
an act may be
disregarded simply because it was done in breach of contract
this explanation of the legal result is
less satisfactory than holding
an
offer to be a contract subject to a condition whose fulfilment cannot be
prevented by any act of
the grantor. (at p76)
16. For these reasons I consider that an option to purchase (at least one in
a form similar to that in the present case) is a contract
to sell the land
upon condition that the grantee gives the notice and does the other things
stipulated in the option. An option to
purchase, regarded in that way, is not
an agreement which gives one of the parties the right to perform it or not as
he chooses;
it gives the grantee the right, if he performs the stipulated
conditions, to become the purchaser. With respect, therefore, I regard
the
reasoning in Kennewell v. Dye (1949) Ch 517 , and that of the majority of the
Court in Carter v. Hyde [1923] HCA 36; (1923)
33 CLR 115 , as
correct. The burden of the
option in the present case was a contractual obligation which devolved upon
the appellant
as personal
representative of the deceased, since it does not
appear from the provisions of the option that it was intended not to
do so, or
that the contract was personal to the deceased. I hold, therefore, that
notwithstanding the death of Mr. Laybutt the appellant
still
had the right to
exercise the option, assuming it to be otherwise valid. (at p76)
17. The question that then arises is whether the notice handed to the
appellant on 23rd October 1972 satisfied the requirements
of the option. Once
it has been decided that the option was binding on the personal
representatives of the grantor, it is clear that
apart from any statutory
requirement to the contrary, notice to the appellant as executrix would have
been sufficient to satisfy
the requirements of the option although she had not
then been granted probate: Kennewell v. Dye (1949) Ch 517 , and see Kelsey v.
Kelsey (1922) 91 LJ Ch 382, at p 384 , and Ballas v. Theophilos (No. 2) (1957)
98 CLR, at p 204 . However, on behalf of the appellant
it was submitted that
the provisions of s. 61 of the Wills, Probate and Administration Act, 1898
(N.S.W.), as amended, had the effect that the option could not be exercised by
notice given to the appellant as executrix but had
to be given to the Public
Trustee. Section 61 provides as follows:
"From and after the decease of any person dying testate orSection 44 of the same statute provides:
intestate, and until probate, or administration, or an order to
collect is granted in respect of his estate, the real and personal
estate of such deceased person shall be deemed to be vested in
the Public Trustee in the same manner and to the same extent as
aforetime the personal estate and effects vested in the Ordinary
in England."
"Upon the grant of probate of the will or administration ofThere is no doubt that at the time when the notice was given the estate of the deceased had by virtue of the operation of s. 61 become formally vested in the Public Trustee, although it is not altogether clear what capacity and powers the Public Trustee had as a result: cf. Holloway v. Public Trustee (1959) SR (NSW) 308, at p311 . At the date of the hearing, however, probate had been granted and s. 44 had taken effect; the estate of the deceased was then vested in the appellant whose title had related back to the time of death. Moreover, although s. 61 provides for the vesting of the deceased's property pending probate, it does not alter the rule that an executor derives his title from the will and that the probate merely authenticates his title and is not the source of it. At the time when the notice was given the appellant was therefore the executrix of the deceased's estate and in that capacity was competent to receive the notice exercising the option; the fact that the property of the deceased was not then vested in her provides no reason why she could not do so. In support of the argument that the notice was not properly given to the appellant reliance was placed on Holland v. King (1848) 6 CB 727 (136 ER 1433) . In that case a partnership deed provided that the executor or administrator of a deceased partner should have the option of succeeding to that partner's share upon giving notice to the surviving partners within three months of the death. A partner died interstate and his widow gave notice to the surviving partners within the three months but did not obtain letters of administration until after that period had expired. It was held that there was no effectual notice under the deed. No reasons were given for the decision but it may be explained on the ground that when the notice was given it was of no validity, since the widow was not then the administratrix of the deceased partner, and that it could not be ratified by the administratrix after the time allowed for the exercise of the option had expired: see Dibbins v. Dibbins (1896) 2 Ch 348 . In the present case, however, no ratification was necessary. The appellant was the executrix at the time when she received the notice and was therefore the appropriate person to receive it. In any case, she did not perform any act which required ratification; she was merely the recipient of the notice. Reliance was also placed on Andrews v. Hogan [1952] HCA 37; (1952) 86 CLR 223 , where a notice to quit was held validly served on the Public Trustee as successor in title to the estate of a deceased tenant, but that case is distinguishable, first, because the question there was in whom the premises had vested and secondly, because in that case no probate was ever granted. The conclusion that the notice was properly given to the appellant in the present case is supported by the actual decision in Carter v. Hyde [1923] HCA 36; (1923) 33 CLR 115 , although this question does not seem to have been discussed; the notice exercising the option was there given by the executors of the deceased grantee although, as the learned trial judge in the present case has pointed out, it appears from the report of the proceedings in the Supreme Court of New South Wales (Hyde v. Carter (1922) 23 SR (NSW) 125, at pp 128, 140 ) that probate was not granted until after the notice had been given. For these reasons, in my opinion the notice given to the appellant will have been effectual for the purpose of exercising the option if the option was valid and its other requirements were satisfied. (at p78)
the estate of any person dying after the passing of this Act, all
real and personal estate which any such person dies seised or
possessed of or entitled to in New South Wales, shall as from
the death of such person pass to and become vested in the
executor to whom probate has been granted or administrator for all
his estate and interest therein . . ."
18. It next becomes necessary to consider the provisions of the option, and
of the contract relating to payment of the deposit.
Clause 1 of the option
provided that "This option may be exercised by . . . notice in writing . . .
and by payment to the said Agent
within the said time of the deposit mentioned
below". Clearly these words purported to make payment, as well as notice, a
condition
of the valid exercise of the option. However, the payment is
required by the clause to be made to "the said Agent" and the option
neither
names any agent nor provides any machinery by which it may be ascertained what
person was intended to receive the payment.
The omitted detail (the name of
the agent) was not of a kind that can be supplied by implication of law.
Moreover, there is no extrinsic
evidence - for example, as to a course of
dealing between the parties - that would enable the agent to be identified. If
it is not
possible so to interpret the option as to determine the name of the
person to whom payment of the deposit is to be made the clause
requiring such
payment to be made will be meaningless and void of contractual force. In
Adamastos Shipping Co. Ltd. v. Anglo-Saxon
Petroleum Co. Ltd. (1959) AC 133,
at pp 175-176 , Lord Reid said:
"In G. Scammell & Nephew Ltd. v. Ouston (1941) AC 251, at p 268 ,
Lord
Wright said: 'The object of the court is to do justice between thevague
parties, and the court will do its best, if satisfied that there was
an ascertainable and determinate intention to contract, to give
effect to that intention, looking at substance and not mere form.
It will not be deterred by mere difficulties of interpretation.
Difficulty is not synonymous with ambiguity so long as any
definite meaning can be extracted. But the test of intention is to
be found in the words used. If these words, considered however
broadly and untechnically and with due regard to all the just
implications, fail to evince any definite meaning on which the
court can safely act, the court has no choice but to say that there
is no contract.' In Nicolene Ltd. v. Simmonds
(1953) 1 QB 543 , that
principle was applied so as to strike out of a contract a term so
or ambiguous that no ascertainable meaning could be given to
it, and to leave the rest of the contract valid." (at p79)
19. There is no provision of the option, or of the incorporated form of
contract, that gives the least hint as to what person was
intended by the
parties to be the vendor's agent for the purposes of the agreement. The fact
that the agent is to be paid as "stakeholder"
(cl. 1 of the form) suggests
that it was not intended that the deceased himself should be paid the deposit.
If this view is incorrect,
and if, on the proper construction of the option
agreement payment of the deposit to the deceased or his personal
representatives
was a sufficient compliance, the fact is that no such payment
was made. On behalf of the respondent it was submitted that is should
be
inferred that the intention of the parties was that either party was entitled
to nominate an agent for the purpose of receiving
the deposit, but in my
opinion the words of the documents do not support such an inference. The
personal qualities of the agent to
whom payment was to be made was a matter of
importance to the deceased. As cl. 16 showed, the deposit was intended to be,
as a deposit
usually is, "a security for the completion of the purchase": Howe
v. Smith (1884) 27 Ch D 89, at p 98 . It is not likely that the
deceased would
have agreed that the deposit should be paid to anyone upon whom he could not
rely to account to him for the money
if he became entitled to it. For example,
the deceased might have been expected to have been unwilling to appoint as his
agent someone
under the influence or domination of the respondent or someone
who for other reasons might be inclined to display partiality towards
the
respondent if a dispute arose. It cannot be said with any confidence that if
at the time the option agreement was made it had
been suggested to the parties
that they should include a provision allowing the respondent to nominate the
person to whom the deposit
should be paid the deceased would have agreed to
the suggestion. It is not possible to imply in the contract a term that the
respondent
should be entitled to select the person to whom payment should be
made. (at p80)
20. The learned trial judge held that the respondent had the right to
nominate the person to whom the deposit should be paid for
the purposes of the
option and of the resulting contract. He said:
"In my opinion, it was open to the plaintiff to nominate theGriffith C.J. citing Fenton
stakeholder himself and then it would have been open to the
vendor to object to the plaintiff's choice and propose a change of
stakeholder which, if the plaintiff refused, would place the
plaintiff at risk if the stakeholder defaulted or made off with the
money: Christie v. Robinson [1907] HCA 19; (1907) 4 CLR 1338, at p 1347 , per
v. Browne (1807) 14 Ves Jun, at p 150 (33 ER, at p 478) ."In my opinion the authorities to which his Honour referred provide no assistance in determining the present question. In Christie v. Robinson [1907] HCA 19; (1907) 4 CLR 1338 it was held that upon the rescission, by mutual consent, of a contract of sale, the purchaser was entitled to recover from the vendor a deposit which he had paid under the contract to the vendor's agent, although the vendor himself had never received the deposit from the agent. Griffith C.J. said that "the fact that an auctioneer may be sued for a return of the deposit in no way concludes the question so as to show that the vendor cannot be sued" (1907) 4 CLR, at p 1347 , and it was in the course of discussing that question that he cited from Smith v. Jackson (1816) 1 Madd 618, at p 620 (56 ER 227, at p 228) the following passage in which Fenton v. Browne (1807) 14 Ves Jun 144 (33 ER 476) is mentioned:
"If then the auctioneer cannot pay over the deposit to the(33 ER, at p 478) , in which case, the
vendor, is he to be considered as his agent? The vendor is
responsible for the loss, if any, occasioned by the auctioneer;
that was determined in Fenton v. Browne (1807) 14 Ves Jun, at p 150
Master of the Rolls says: 'Upon a sale by auction the vendorThis passage means no more than that if one party proposes that a stakeholder be changed and the other refuses, the latter takes the risk of loss caused by the default of the stakeholder. The matter which was decided in Fenton v. Browne was that a vendor who had resisted an application by the purchaser for payment into court of the deposit which was in the hands of the vendor's agent had to bear the loss caused by the agent's failure. Grant M.R. said (1807) 14 Ves Jun, at p 150 (33 ER, at p 478) that the refusal to concur in the proposition that the money be paid into court threw "the risk of his (the agent's) credit on the party refusing". It does not follow from this that where a contract fails to name the person intended to act as stakeholder it must be implied that either party has a right of nomination. (at p81)
determines who is to receive the deposit. The auctioneer is not a
stakeholder of the purchaser; at least not of his choice. If he
were a stakeholder for both parties, either would have a right to
propose to change such stakeholder; and the party refusing
takes upon himself the risk.'"
21. A further submission on behalf of the respondent was that upon the proper
construction of the documents the vendor had reserved
to himself the right to
nominate an agent if he wished the deposit to be paid, and that if no agent
were nominated the provision
for payment of the deposit did not come into
operation. Alternatively it was put that although there was an obligation to
pay the
deposit the vendor was given the right to elect whether it should be
paid by naming an agent. Both of these suggested constructions
are opposed to
the words of the documents which plainly require payment of a deposit to an
agent but fail to indicate the identity
of the person to whom payment is to be
made. (at p81)
22. For these reasons, in my opinion it must be held that those provisions of
cl. 1 of the option that relate to the payment of
the deposit are meaningless.
The clause cannot be construed to permit payment to any person whom the
respondent might select. The
payment made to the solicitors was not a
compliance with the provisions of cl. 1. (at p81)
23. It is then necessary to decide whether it is possible to strike out of
the option that part of cl. 1 which is meaningless, leaving
the remainder
valid, or whether the whole option fails. It is clear that an agreement is not
nullified by the inclusion of a meaningless
clause, provided that the latter
is severable: Nicolene Ltd. v. Simmonds (1953) 1 QB, at p 552 ; Fitzgerald v.
Masters [1956] HCA
53; (1956) 95
CLR 420, at p 427 ; Adamastos Shipping Co. Ltd. v.
Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co. Ltd. (1959) AC, at p 176 . The question
whether a
meaningless
clause is severable depends on the intention of the parties to be
gathered from the agreement as a whole: Whitlock
v. Brew [1968] HCA 71; (1968)
118 CLR 445,
at p 461 . The question in the present case is whether the parties intended
that the
option should be binding notwithstanding
the failure of the provision
requiring payment of a deposit. The Court will of course attempt
to give
efficacy to an agreement which
the parties no doubt believed would be binding,
and will be most reluctant to hold meaningless
and void an agreement which the
parties
apparently intended to have legal effect. However, it seems to me
impossible to say that
the deceased intended that the option, which
was
expressed to be exerciseable on payment of the specified deposit, can be
exercised
without any payment being made. The receipt
of a deposit, as I have
already indicated, is generally regarded by a vendor as a matter
of some
importance and the provisions of
cl. 16 of the form of contract indicate that
this was so in the present case. Moreover,
the payment and receipt of a
deposit was
basic to the relationship that would result from the exercise of
the option. Clause 1 of
the form of contract requires the payment
of the
deposit (which is obviously the same deposit as that mentioned in the option)
upon
the signing of the agreement and requires
"the balance of the purchase
price" to be paid in cash on completion. Other provisions
of the form of
contract speak of the deposit
and of the balance of the purchase price. The
rejection of that part of cl. 1 of the
option that deals with the payment of a
deposit
would affect the balance of the contractual relationship between the
parties, since
the payment of a deposit is an integral part
of the working out
of the contract. The provision for the payment of a deposit appears
to be
essential to the exercise of the option.
I conclude, therefore, that the
meaningless words of cl. 1 of the option agreement
cannot be severed from the
rest of that agreement
but have the effect of invalidating it. (at p82)
27. For this reason, there is, in my opinion, no binding contract between the
appellant and the respondent. It is accordingly unnecessary
to consider the
other grounds on which it was suggested that the agreement was void for
uncertainty - particularly the failure to
cross out unnecessary words, or fill
in the gaps, as the case may be, in cll. 2(a) and (e) of the option and cl. 17
and the 4th Sch.
of the form of contract - although I may say that I incline
to the view that the difficulties raised by those provisions might have
been
overcome by a process of construction. (at p82)
28. I would allow the appeal. (at p82)
ORDER
Appeal allowed with costs.
Order of the Supreme Court of New South Wales set aside and in lieu thereof order that the suit be dismissed with costs.
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