Partridge v Crittenden

Partridge v. Crittenden
Court Divisional Court
Full case name Arthur Robert Partridge v. Anthony Ian Crittenden
Decided 5 April 1968
Citation(s) [1968] 1 WLR 1204; [1968] 2 All ER 421;(1968) 132 JP 367; (1968) 112 SJ 582
Cases cited Fisher v. Bell [1961] 1 QB 394; Grainger & Son v. Gough (Surveyor of Taxes) [1896] AC 325; Mella v. Monahan [1961] Crim. LR 175 (DC)
Legislation cited

Protection of Birds Act 1954 s. 6

Protection of Birds Act 1957 Sch 4
Court membership
Judge(s) sitting Lord Parker, CJ, Ashworth and Blain, JJ
Keywords
Bird Conservation; Offer and acceptance; Invitation to treat; Advertisement

Partridge v Crittenden [1968] 1 WLR 1204 is an English case, which was heard by the Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of England and Wales on appeal from the Magistrates' Court and is well-known (amongst other cases) for establishing the legal precedent in English contract law, that advertisements are usually considered to be invitations to treat.[1][2]

Facts

This case was a case stated by the Magistrates' Court sitting at the Castle in Chester on 19 July 1967.

On 13 April 1967 an advertisement by the appellant (Arthur Robert Partridge) appeared in the periodical "Cage and Aviary Birds", under the general heading "Classified Advertisements" which contained, amongst others, the words Quality British A.B.C.R... Bramblefinch cocks, Bramblefinch hens 25 s. each. In no place was there any direct use of the words "offer for sale". A Thomas Shaw Thompson wrote to Partridge asking him to send him an ABCR Bramblefinch hen (a brambling) and enclosed a cheque for 30s. On 1 May 1967, Partridge dispatched a brambling, which was wearing a closed-ring around its leg, to Thompson in a box. Thompson received the box and was able to remove the ring from the bird's leg without injuring it.

Partridge was charged by Anthony Ian Crittenden, on behalf of the RSPCA, with illegally offering for sale a live wild bird which was not a close-ringed specimen, bred in captivity, against s. 6(1)* and Sch. 4* of the Protection of Birds Act 1954. The magistrates decided that the advertisement was an offer for sale and that the ABCR Bramblefinch hen was not a close-ringed specimen bred in captivity, because it was possible to remove the ring from the bird's leg.

Partridge was convicted, was fined £5 and ordered to pay £5 5 s advocate's fee and £4 9 s. 6 d. witnesses' expenses.

Partridge appealed against conviction.

Relevant law

Section 6(1) of the Protection of Birds Act 1954 states:

"If ... any person sells, offers for sale ... (a) any live wild bird... including in Schedule 4 to this Act of a species which is resident in or visits the British Isles in a wild state, other than a close-ringed specimen bred in captivity; ... he shall be guilty of an offence ...". Schedule 4 of the Act has the heading "Wild birds which may not be sold alive unless close-ringed and bred in captivity" and amongst the names in the schedule is "brambling".[3]

Judgment

The High Court had to answer whether the appellant's advertisement constituted a legitimate offer for sale (as the prosecution chose to prosecute only for the weaker of the three possible alleged facts), and whether the bird was not a close-ringed specimen bred in captivity under the Protection of Birds Act 1954 if it were possible to remove the ring from its leg. It was held that the advertisement in question constituted in law an invitation to treat and not an offer to sell; therefore the offence with which the appellant was charged was not established. The judges also said that if the only issue were whether the bird was a close-ringed specimen under the Protection of Birds Act 1954, the magistrates' judgment would have been upheld. Ashworth J gave his judgment first.

Lord Parker CJ said the following.

Blain J concurred.

References

  1. Richard Stone (2005). The Modern Law of Contract. Psychology Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-85941-882-6.
  2. Jill Poole (2016). Textbook on Contract Law. Oxford University Press. pp. 38–39. ISBN 978-0-19-873280-8.
  3. Protection of Birds Act 1954

See also

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