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High Court of Australia |
D.T.R. NOMINEES PTY. LTD. v. MONA HOMES PTY. LTD. [1978] HCA 12; (1978) 138 CLR 423
Contract
High Court of Australia
Stephen(1), Mason(1), Jacobs(1), Murphy(2) and Aickin(3) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Contract - Sale of land - Breach - Essential terms - Right to rescind - Assertion of erroneous construction of contract - Whether repudiation - Assertion that contract rescinded based on other party's refusal to accept correct construction of contract - Whether repudiation - Abandonment of - Right to return of deposit.
HEARING
Sydney, 1977, August 11. 1978 April 26. 26:4:1978DECISION
1978, April 26."4. The Plan of sub-division, a copy of which is annexed
hereto, has been lodged with the Fairfield Municipal
Council. The Vendor will proceed with all due dispatch to
comply with the conditions of approval of the Council and to
have the relevant plan of sub-division lodged for registration
as a deposited plan, provided however that if the said plan
has not been lodged for registration as a deposited plan
within a period of 12 months from the date hereof or within
such further period as may be mutually agreed upon, either
the Purchaser or the Vendor may at any time thereafter by
notice in writing rescind this contract whereupon all moneys
paid to the Vendor hereunder shall be refunded to the
Purchaser and thereafter neither party shall have any action,
right, claim or demand against the other arising out of such
rescission. In any event, the Vendor shall not be otherwise
liable for any delay in such lodgement or registration.
5. Notwithstanding anything herein contained, the
dimensions shown on the sketch plan attached hereto are
provisional and are subject to alteration; also completion of
final survey and registration of the relevant plan of
subdivision as a deposited plan by the Registrar General and no
objection requisition or claim should be taken or made by the
Purchaser in respect of any minor discrepancy between the
plan annexed hereto and the plan of sub-division as
registered by the Registrar General, provided however that if
any such alteration, variation or discrepancy is other than
minor, the Purchaser or Solicitor shall elect within 21 days of
the Purchaser or his Solicitor being informed of the date and
lodgement number of the said plan of sub-division, whether
to complete the contract on the terms set out herein or
whether to cancel the contract and in the latter case,
notwithstanding any other provision herein contained, the
Purchaser shall accept a refund of all moneys paid by him as
deposit and instalments in full satisfaction of all actions,
rights claims and demands which he may have against the
Vendor hereunder. Should the Purchaser or his Solicitor not
so elect to cancel the contract herein within the said period of
21 days, then he shall be deemed to have waived such right of
cancellation and accepted the said plan of subdivision as so
lodged and the dimensions and shape of the said land as
appears in such plan so lodged." (at p426)
2. Special condition 6 provided that the property was sold subject to
restrictions on use to be created either upon "registration
of the said plan
of subdivision as a deposited plan" or a covenant to be entered into on
completion, particulars of the restrictions
being set out in the condition. In
special condition 8 it was provided:
"(a) the Purchaser shall not be obliged to complete prior toSpecial condition 9 provided that the appellant would complete the kerbing and guttering of lots 1 to 9 fronting The Horsley Drive prior to completion and would make electricity, water and sewerage services available to each lot prior to completion. (at p426)
registration of the Vendor's plan of sub-division of
which the property sold forms part ..."
3. A deposit of $12,870 was payable on the signing of the contract. Subject
to special condition 9, the balance of the purchase
price was payable in cash
on completion to take place within fourteen days of written notification being
sent by the appellant's
solicitors to the respondents' solicitors that the
plan of subdivision in respect of the subject land had been registered and in
this respect time was expressed to be of the essence of the contract. Time was
not made of the essence in any other respect. (at
p426)
4. The appellant had not lodged the plan of subdivision referred to in
special condition 4 at the time of the making of the contract.
However, it had
lodged a plan of subdivision of the whole, indicating that it sought approval
of so much of the subdivision as related
to the nine lots, that is the
subdivision of the whole into the nine lots and two other lots comprising the
balance of the land.
In this plan a proposed public reserve at the south
became lot 10 and the remainder of the land, including the proposed roads and
another public reserve, were left unsubdivided as lot 11. This subdivision was
approved by the Fairfield Council on 9th October 1973,
prior to the making of
the contract. A plan to give effect to this approval was lodged with the
Registrar-General on 25th February
1974 and was registered on 7th June 1974.
(at p426)
5. The appellant considered that, according to the construction which it
placed upon the contract, it was entitled to subdivide
the land in two stages.
In the first stage it intended to subdivide the land so as to provide the nine
lots the subject of the sale.
In the second stage it would subdivide the
balance of the land so as to provide the remaining lots in the plan annexed to
the contract.
(at p427)
6. The appellant had taken steps to effect the subdivision of the balance of
the land. Application for council approval was made
on 23rd October 1973, a
fortnight after the stage 1 subdivision was approved and some three weeks
before the contract was signed.
Stage 2 was approved by the council on 13th
December 1973. The primary judge found that, due to alterations in the
proposed route
of an expressway, it became necessary to vary the stage 2 plan
and that plan as amended was approved by the council on 5th April
1974, but
there is some doubt as to whether the evidence establishes this fact. (at
p427)
7. On 31st January 1974, in response to an inquiry on behalf of the
respondents, the appellant's solicitors informed the respondents'
solicitors
that the primary application under the Real Property Act, 1900 (N.S.W.), as
amended, had been lodged before Christmas and that the plan of subdivision had
not yet been lodged. On 7th June 1974
the appellant's solicitors advised that
the primary application and the deposited plan would be registered that day.
On 14th June
they confirmed that registration of both documents had taken
place on 7th June. They asserted that settlement should take place within
the
time set out in the first schedule to the contract. This was disputed by the
respondents' solicitors who claimed, by letter dated
20th June 1974, that the
first schedule only applied subject to special condition 9 and that therefore
unless the kerbing and guttering
and the electricity, water and sewerage
services were available before 21st June 1974 time would no longer be of the
essence of the
contract. They stated that the respondents were not prepared to
complete until special condition 9 had been complied with and the
roadway
between lots 5 and 6 had been constructed. On 28th June the respondents'
solicitors sent their requisitions. On 4th July
the appellant's solicitors
stated that the kerbing and guttering had been completed and that the services
referred to would be finalized
within ten days. They stated that the area
between lots 5 and 6 was simply land owned by the appellant and had nothing to
do with
the contract of sale to the respondents. (at p427)
8. On 19th July the respondents purported to rescind the contract on the
ground that the plan lodged on 25th February 1974 was not
a plan comprehended
by the contract and that it constituted a repudiation of the contract by the
appellant. The evidence does not
establish that the respondents knew that the
plan lodged was different from the plan called for by the contract, and it
must be taken
that the respondents were unaware of its true character until a
time shortly before the date on which they purported to rescind the
contract.
(at p428)
9. On 25th July the appellant's solicitors informed the respondents'
solicitors that the appellant considered that the rescission
was a wrongful
repudiation of the contract, that the appellant accepted the repudiation and
rescinded the contract itself, forfeiting
the deposit and reserving its rights
in respect of damages. (at p428)
10. The respondents instituted an action in the Supreme Court of New South
Wales seeking a declaration that they had validly rescinded
the contract. The
essence of their case was that the plan lodged on 25th February 1974
constituted a repudiation and renunciation
of the contract. Alternatively they
alleged that by the letters to which we have referred the appellant repudiated
the contract.
The respondents then averred that they accepted the renunciation
and rescinded. By its defence the appellant denied that the plan
was other
than the plan called for by the contract. It also denied that it had renounced
the contract and it cross-claimed seeking
a declaration that it had validly
rescinded and that the deposit was forfeited. (at p428)
11. Wootten J. held that the expression "the relevant plan of subdivision" in
special condition 4 was used to mean something different
from the plan of
subdivision annexed to the contract. His Honour went on to find as a fact
"that at the time of entering into the contract the partiesHis conclusion therefore was that there was no breach of contract by the appellant. (at p428)
were aware that the total subdivision was to be carried out in
stages. Against this background the interpretation of the
words in special condition 4, 'the relevant plan of
subdivision', as meaning the plan of subdivision relevant to the
nine lots in the contract, which seems to me the preferable
construction on a mere reading of the contract without a
knowledge of background facts, becomes overwhelmingly
compelling."
12. With great respect to his Honour, it is very difficult to see how this
interpretation of the contract can be sustained. The
first sentence of special
condition 4 states that the plan of subdivision, a copy of which is annexed,
has been lodged with the Council,
the inference being that it was lodged by
way of application for approval of the subdivision which it described. The
second sentence
of the condition then imposes an obligation on the appellant
"with all due dispatch to comply with the conditions of approval of
the
Council and to have the relevant plan of subdivision lodged for registration
as a deposited plan". In this context it is apparent
that "the relevant plan
of sub-division" is the plan of subdivision as approved by the council
consequent upon the application for
approval made in respect of the contract
plan of subdivision. This is confirmed by special condition 8 (a) which
specifically negates
any obligation on the part of the respondents to complete
prior to registration of "the Vendor's plan of sub-division of which the
property sold forms part". (at p429)
13. As Hutley J.A observed in the Court of Appeal, there was no reason to
suppose that the plan embodying the subdivision as approved
by the Council
would correspond precisely with the plan as lodged. Some departures might be
expected in the normal course of events
and it was to the possibility of
discrepancies between the plan as lodged (the contract plan) and the plan as
approved that the provisions
of special condition 5 were directed. So
understood the two conditions made good and practical sense. (at p429)
14. The primary judge seems to have been misled by what he describes as
"background" evidence as to the understanding of the parties,
evidence which
he appears to have used for the purpose of construing the contract. This
evidence in our view did not establish "that
at the time of entering into the
contract the parties were aware that the total subdivision was to be carried
out in stages". There
was no evidence that the respondents were informed that
a two-stage subdivision was intended and Mr. Staff for the appellant conceded,
and correctly conceded, that there was no evidence which would justify the
attribution of knowledge of that fact to the respondents.
(at p429)
15. Since there was no evidence of a circumstance (known to both parties)
that there were to be two stages of subdivision and consequently
two plans of
subdivision, evidence of the intentions of one party was not admissible in aid
of the interpretation of the written
contract. A court may admit evidence of
surrounding circumstances in the form of "mutually known facts" "to identify
the meaning
of a descriptive term" and it may admit evidence of the "genesis"
and objectively the "aim" of a transaction to show that the attribution
of a
strict legal meaning would "make the transaction futile" (Prenn v. Simmonds
(1971) 1 WLR 1381, at p 1384; (1971) 3 All ER 237,
at p 240 ). But it cannot
receive oral evidence from one party as to its intentions and construe the
contract by reference to those
intentions. (at p429)
16. The only plan of subdivision within the common contemplation of the
parties was that annexed to the contract and the contract
fell to be construed
accordingly. Since only one plan was in common contemplation it is not
possible to identify any other plan as
"the relevant plan". The conclusion
must follow that the differences in terminology which are to be detected in
the contract do not
disclose an intention that there should be a registration
of any plan of subdivision other than a plan of the whole in accordance
with
the annexure. (at p430)
17. On the interpretation which we had given to special condition 4 the
appellant was in breach of contract. Instead of lodging
with the council the
contract plan of subdivision providing for subdivision into the thirty-five
lots and proceeding expeditiously
to comply with the council's conditions and
to register that plan as approved by the council it only sought and obtained
approval
of a subdivision of the nine lots sold and obtained registration of a
plan embodying that limited subdivision. In the Court of Appeal,
Hutley J.A.
(with whom Samuels J.A. agreed) held that this amounted to a breach of an
essential term of the contract for the reasons
that special condition 4
imposed an obligation on the appellant which was to be carried out "with all
due dispatch" and that it enabled
either party to rescind the contract if the
plan was not lodged for registration as a deposited plan within twelve months
from the
date of the contract. (at p430)
18. We have some difficulty in perceiving how these provisions sustain the
conclusion that the obligation to do things "with all
due dispatch" is an
essential term the breach of which gives rise to a right of rescission, though
the circumstances essential to
an exercise of the express right to rescind
have not taken place. First, time was not of the essence of the contract
except in a
respect which is not presently relevant. And in the absence of
such a provision we fail to see how a stipulation calling for action
to be
taken expeditiously of itself constitute an essential term. Secondly, the
presence of the express right to rescind in the event
of non-registration
within twelve months indicates that mere failure to act expeditiously was not
in itself a breach of an essential
term. Indeed, the terms of the express
right to rescind indicate that the appellant had some latitude in the matter
in that in the
ultimate analysis so long as the plan was registered within
twelve months the contract was to remain on foot. (at p430)
19. Whether a term of a contract is essential or not is a question of
construction which is to be answered with due regard to the
general nature of
the contract considered as a whole and to its particular terms. See Tramways
Advertising Pty. Ltd. v. Luna Park
(N.S.W.) Ltd. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632, at pp
641-642 , where Jordan C.J. said:
"The test of essentiality is whether it appears from theThis statement of the law, which was approved in Associated Newspapers Ltd. v. Bancks [1951] HCA 24; (1951) 83 CLR 322, at p 337 , emphasizes that the quality of essentiality depends for its existence on a judgment which is made of the general nature of the contract and its particular provisions, a judgment which takes close account of the importance which the parties have attached to the provision as evidenced by the contract itself as applied to the surrounding circumstances. Once this is understood, there is no sufficient foundation for holding that the respondents would not have entered into the contract had they known that the appellant had not lodged the contract plan of subdivision and that it would not proceed expeditiously thereafter. We know that the respondents were willing to accept a right to rescind conditioned by the events mentioned in special condition 4. (at p431)
general nature of the contract considered as a whole, or from
some particular term or terms, that the promise is of such
importance to the promisee that he would not have entered
into the contract unless he had been assured of a strict or a
substantial performance of the promise, as the case may be,
and that this ought to have been apparent to the
promisor: Flight v. Booth
(1834) 1 Bing (NC) 370, at p 377 (131 ER 1160, at pp 1162-1163);
Bettini v. Gye (1976) 1 QBD 183, at p 188; Bentsen
v. Taylor, Sons & Co. (No. 2)
(1893) 2 QB 274, at p 281; Fullers' Theatres Ltd. v.
Musgrove [1923] HCA 12; (1923) 31 CLR 524, at pp 537-538;
Bowes v. Chaleyer [1923] HCA 15; (1923) 32 CLR 159;
Clifton v. Coffey [1924] HCA 35; (1924) 34 CLR 434, at pp 438, 440.
If the innocent party would not have entered into the
contract unless assured of a strict and literal performance of
the promise, he may in general treat himself as discharged
upon any breach of the promise, however slight."
20. Quite apart from this aspect of the matter the respondents' case as
pleaded in pars 5, 5A and 6 of its amended statement of
claim was not one of
rescission for actual breach of essential term, but one of rescission for
repudiation and renunciation for so-called
"anticipatory breach". Their case
is accordingly to be considered on that footing. The relevant question
therefore is whether the
events which we have recounted evidence an intention
on the part of the appellant to repudiate or renounce the contract or more
precisely
whether such an intention is to be inferred from those events. (at
p431)
21. For the respondents it was submitted that such an intention should be
inferred from the appellant's continued adherence to an
incorrect
interpretation of the contract. It was urged that the appellant, because it
was acting on an erroneous view, was not willing
to perform the contract
according to its terms. No doubt there are cases in which a party, by
insisting on an incorrect interpretation
of a contract, evinces an intention
that he will not perform the contract according to its terms. But there are
other cases in which
a party, though asserting a wrong view of a contract
because he believes it to be correct, is willing to perform the contract
according
to its tenor. He may be willing to recognize his heresy once the
true doctrine is enunciated or he may be willing to accept an authoritative
exposition of the correct interpretation. In either event an intention to
repudiate the contract could not be attributed to him.
As Pearson L.J.
observed in Sweet & Maxwell Ltd. v. Universal News Services Ltd. (1964) 2 QB
699, at p 734 :
"In the last resort, if the parties cannot agree, the true
construction will have to be determined by the court. A
party should not too readily be found to have refused to
perform the agreement by contentious observations in the
course of discussions or arguments..." (at p432)
22. In this case the appellant acted on its view of the contract without
realizing that the respondents were insisting upon a different
view until such
time as they purported to rescind. It was not a case in which any attempt was
made to persuade the appellant of the
error of its ways or indeed to give it
any opportunity to reconsider its position in the light of an assertion of the
correct interpretation.
There is therefore no basis on which one can infer
that the appellant was persisting in its interpretation willy nilly in the
face
of a clear enunciation of the true agreement. (at p432)
23. Mr. Meagher for the respondents valiantly submitted that the appellant
did not bona fide believe that the contract was to be
interpreted as
authorizing the two-stage subdivision which it implemented. Indeed, he
suggested that the interpretation was so irrational
and ill founded as to
compel the inference that the appellant did not bona fide believe in it. We
cannot accept that this is so -
after all, the primary judge, mistaken though
he was, thought that this was the correct view of the contract. In any event,
on the
evidence this Court would not be justified in finding that the
appellant acted otherwise than in accordance with a bona fide belief
as to the
correctness of the interpretation which it sought to place upon the contract.
Consequently it is a case of a bona fide
dispute as to the true construction
of a contract expressed in terms which are by no means clear (see Asprey J.A.
in Satellite Estate
Pty. Ltd. v. Jaquet (1968) 71 SR (NSW) 126, at p 149 ). In
these circumstances the Court is not justified in drawing an inference
that
the appellant intended not to perform the contract according to its terms or
that it repudiated the contract. That being so,
the respondents were not
entitled to rescind the contract for "anticipatory breach" as they purported
to do by their notice of 19th
July 1974. (at p433)
24. But the question remains whether the appellant was entitled to rely on
this ineffective rescission of the contract by the respondents
as itself a
repudiation of the contract and thereupon to rescind as it purported to do by
its letter of 25th July 1974. This is the
question raised by the cross-action.
In our opinion the appellant could not rely on the respondents' purported
rescission as a repudiation.
The respondents purported to rescind only upon
the basis that the appellant would not complete the contract as correctly
interpreted.
They were in error in regarding themselves as entitled to rescind
at the stage when they purported to do so but they were not in
error in their
interpretation of the contract. The actions of the parties must now be
considered in the light of the true interpretation
of the contract. The
purported rescission of 19th July did not evince an intention not to proceed
with the contract correctly interpreted;
it did no more than evince an
intention not to proceed with the contract on the basis of the incorrect
interpretation then being
advanced by the appellant. That cannot be regarded
as a repudiation which would entitle the appellant to rescind when it was
itself
the party in error. A party in order to be entitled to rescind for
anticipatory breach must at the time of rescission himself be
willing to
perform the contract on its proper interpretation. Otherwise he is not an
innocent party, the common description of a
party entitled to rescind for
anticipatory breach, and indeed could profit from his misinterpretation of the
contract, as the appellant
seeks to do in this case when it claims forfeiture
of the deposit and damages. By insisting on its incorrect interpretation of
the
contract to the point of claiming to rescind because the respondents were
relying on the different but correction interpretation,
the appellant by that
stage showed that "definitive resolve or decision against doing in the future
what the contract" (required)
which is referred to by Dixon C.J. in Rawson v.
Hobbs [1961] HCA 72; (1961) 107 CLR 466, at p 481 . Whether or not the respondents
could by
then
have rescinded certainly the appellant could not do so. (at p433)
25. The appellant never accepted that the contract be performed according to
its correct interpretation and thus the facts are different
from those in
Lennon v. Scarlett & Co. [1921] HCA 42; (1921) 29 CLR 499 . There a plaintiff had, after the
making of the contract,
sought to insist
on additional terms. The defendant
then called off negotiations, in effect purporting to rescind. It was held
that
the attempt by
the plaintiff to add new terms did not amount to a
repudiation. It was further held that the defendant had repudiated.
But the
difference
between that case and the present case is that there the plaintiff,
after the defendant's purported rescission,
offered to complete
the contract
on its true terms. The defendant declined to do so. By that time the plaintiff
was willing to complete
the contract
according to its true terms and he could
therefore treat the defendant's act as a repudiation and could rescind
accordingly.
(at
p434)
26. Thus the contract in the present case was still on foot on and after 25th
July 1974. Neither party had effectively rescinded.
But there can be no doubt
that by 5th December 1974, when these proceedings were commenced, neither
party, whatever may have been
their reasons, regarded the contract as being
still on foot. Neither party intended that the contract should be further
performed.
In these circumstances the parties must be regarded as having so
conducted themselves as to abandon or abrogate the contract. The
position is
similar to that with which Isaacs J. dealt in Summers v. The Commonwealth [1918] HCA 33;
(1918) 25 CLR 144 . The plaintiff
did not succeed
in his action for damages
for breach of contract, but on the other hand the defendant had not rescinded.
Time passed
during which
neither party took any steps to perform the contract.
It was held that the parties had so conducted themselves as mutually
to
abandon
or abrogate the contract. (at p434)
27. A consequence of this abandonment and abrogation was held by Isaacs J.
(1918) 25 CLR, at p 153 to be that the deposit was returnable.
Likewise the
deposit is returnable by the appellant to the respondents in the present case.
The respondents claimed return of the
deposit in their statement of claim but
not upon the basis that the contract had been abandoned. However, that was not
the basis
of the claim in Summers and yet the order was made. The position
there was somewhat different as it was a trial in the original jurisdiction
of
this Court. Nevertheless, to remit the case to the Supreme Court would be to
add needlessly to expense. The position which now
arises is not dissimilar to
that with which Dixon C.J. dealt in Rawson v. Hobbs (1961) 107 CLR, at pp
484-485 . In all the circumstances
it appears to be the best course to allow
to stand so much of the order of the New South Wales Court of Appeal as
ordered return
of the deposit but with no particular order for payment of
interest. (at p435)
28. We would therefore allow the appeal in so far as it was ordered that the
suit be referred back to the Equity Division for assessment
of the damages
claimed by the respondents but would otherwise dismiss the appeal. There
should be no order for costs in respect of
the appeal to this Court. (at
p435)
MURPHY J. The appellant/vendor ("D.T.R.") and the respondents/purchasers
("Mona Homes") were parties to a land development contract.
During the course
of performance, the parties asserted completely opposed interpretations of
D.T.R.'s obligation under the contract.
The obligation was (as Mona Homes
contended) to develop the land by one subdivision into thirty-five lots.
D.T.R. claimed that it
was entitled to develop the land in stages, and in
breach of its obligations had obtained registration with the council of a
subdivision
of nine lots. Mona Homes described D.T.R.'s asserted view as one
which no reasonable person could honestly hold. (at p435)
2. Mona Homes rescinded and claimed damages. D.T.R. treated this notice of
rescission as a repudiation and itself rescinded and
claimed damages. (at
p435)
3. In proceedings brought by Mona Homes in the Supreme Court of New South
Wales for a declaration that they had validly rescinded
(D.T.R. made a
cross-claim for a declaration that it had validly rescinded), the major point
of contention was the construction of
the contract. The primary judge, Wootten
J. upheld D.T.R.'s contentions on the meaning of the contractual obligations
and upheld
its claim to rescind. This was reversed by the New South Wales
Court of Appeal which accepted Mona Homes' contentions and upheld
their claim
to rescind as valid. In my opinion, Mona Homes' interpretation of the
contractual obligations is correct. It is unnecessary
to add to what is said
in the joint reasons of Stephen, Mason and Jacobs JJ. (at p435)
4. The majority of the Court of Appeal held that D.T.R. had broken an
essential term of the contract and referred to Jordan C.J.'s
statement in
Tramways Advertising Pty. Ltd. v. Luna Park (N.S.W.) Ltd. (1938) 38 SR (NSW)
632, at pp 641-642 (which was approved
in Associated Newspapers Ltd. v. Bancks [1951] HCA 24;
(1951) 83 CLR 322, at p 337 ):
"The test of essentiality is whether it appears from the
general nature of the contract considered as a whole, or from
some particular term or terms, that the promise is of such
importance to the promisee that he would not have entered
into the contract unless he had been assured of a strict or a
substantial performance of the promise, as the case may be,
and that this ought to have been apparent to the promisor:
Flight v. Booth (1834) 1 Bing (NC) 370, at p 377
(131 ER 1160, at pp 1162-1163); Bettini v. Gye
(1876) 1 QBD 183, at p 188; Bentsen v. Taylor
Sons & Co. (No. 2) (1893) 2 QB 274, at p 281;
Fullers' Theatres Ltd. v. Musgrove [1923] HCA 12; (1923) 31 CLR 524, at pp 537-538;
Bowes v. Chaleyer [1923] HCA 15; (1923) 32 CLR 159; Clifton v. Coffey
[1924] HCA 35; (1924) 34 CLR 434, at pp 438, 440.
If the innocent party would not have entered into the
contract unless assured of a strict and literal performance of
the promise, he may in general treat himself as discharged
upon any breach of the promise, however slight." (at p436)
5. This "test" is so vague that I would not describe it as a test. It diverts
attention from the real question which is whether
the nonperformance means
substantial failure to perform the contractual obligations. The inquiry into
the motivation for entry into
the contract is not the real point. Numerous
purchasers may enter into similar contracts with widely different motives.
What does
it matter if Mona Homes would have entered the contract even if the
terms were as D.T.R. claimed them to be? However, Mona Homes
did not found
their entitlement to rescind on breach by D.T.R. of an essential term. Rather
they claimed that what D.T.R. did, and
what it said it would do, in purported
performance, amounted to a repudiation of the contract. This is a question of
fact. The history
has been set out in the joint judgment. (at p436)
6. Mona Homes were entitled to a performance by D.T.R. of its obligations. It
is irrelevant whether D.T.R.'s asserted interpretation
of its obligations is
one that no reasonable person could honestly hold; in this respect this case
is to be distinguished from cases
which involve a contract of service or other
continuing relationship where such considerations may be crucial. Once the
proper construction
of the obligations is established, it is clear that
D.T.R.'s partial performance and its intended performance was not what was
promised
and not substantially what was promised. D.T.R. has insisted through
to this Court on its right to perform in a way which was not
on the proper
interpretation a performance of its obligations. At the time of the notice of
rescission by Mona Homes, it had become
apparent from D.T.R.'s conduct and
assertions that D.T.R. did not intend to perform the contract substantially
according to its correct
interpretation (even if this was through an honest
but mistaken view by D.T.R.). Mona Homes were then entitled to be relieved
from
their obligations. They were entitled to rescind as they did and to claim
damages. (at p437)
7. The appeal should be dismissed. (at p437)
AICKIN J. I have had the advantage of reading the joint reasons for judgment
of Stephen, Mason and Jacobs JJ. with which I am in
complete agreement. I have
nothing to add. (at p437)
ORDER
Appeal allowed as to part and order of the New South Wales Court of Appeal varied accordingly by omitting so much thereof as orders that the suit be referred back to the Equity Division for assessment of the damages claimed by the present respondents. Appeal otherwise dismissed without order as to costs of this appeal.
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