Hartog v Colin & Shields

Hartog v Colin & Shields
Court High Court
Decided 27 June 1939
Citation(s) [1939] 3 All ER 566
Case opinions
Singleton J
Keywords
Mistake - Price of subject-matter of transaction - Goods offered at certain prices per pound instead of per piece - Offeree's knowledge of mistake - Whether acceptance of such offer a binding contract.

Hartog v Colin & Shields [1939] 3 All ER 566 is an important English contract law case regarding unilateral mistake. It holds that when it is obvious that someone has made a mistake in the terms of an offer, one may not simply "snap up" the offer and be able to enforce the agreement.

Facts

Contemporary example of price list, albeit for trade and public acceptance rather than a private offer to one potential buyer as in this case. Prices were expressed per piece, sometimes price lists added the average weight of each piece.

The defendants, Colin & Shields,[1] were London hide merchants. Mr Louis-Levie Hartog was a Belgian furrier, living in Brussels. Colin & Shields discussed and verbally agreed to sell 30,000 Argentinian hare skins at “10d per skin” (which would have come to £1,250) to Mr Hartog. When the firm the final offer in writing it mistakenly wrote “10,000 skins at 10d per lb” and the other 20,000 lesser skins similarly per lb (imperial pound), not in the standard unit in the industry of per unit (per piece, that is per skin or half skin). As hare skins average around 5oz, this was 516ths of the price discussed and orally agreed upon.

Mr Hartog tried to hold them to this very good written offer. He claimed loss of profit, or, in the alternative, the difference between the contract price and the market price at the time of the breach. Colin & Shields pleaded that their offer was by mistake wrongly expressed. They plead that they had still intended to offer the goods per piece, and not per (imperial) pound. They argued Hartog was well aware of this mistake and fraudulently accepted an offer which he well knew that the defendants had never intended to make. In the circumstances, they denied that any binding contract was entered into, and, if there was, would counterclaim against its enforcement, for its rescission.

Judgment

The judge found in Colin & Shields’ favour on the grounds that the plaintiff must have realised the defendants’ error, which, as it concerned a term of the contract, rendered the contract void. Singleton J read the following judgment.

See also

  • Tamplin v James (1880) 15 Ch D 215, applied in that specific performance would not be available given this would amount to clear "injustice"
  • Smith v Hughes (1871) LT 6 QB 597, distinguished
  • The Moorcock (1889) 14 PD 64, applied in that the law will imply (contract) such terms as are "obvious and necessary" (not those merely "desirable and reasonable") such as always included or implicit in a particular course of trade.

Notes

  1. Colin & Shields was founded in 1921. In the 1970s the firm was absorbed into Dalgety plc.
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