Title: Misrepresentation
1Misrepresentation
2Misrepresentation
- Three types of pre-contractual statements
- Sales talk The conversations that sales people
use to sell, that no one reasonably expects to be
binding on the parties to the contract Jewellery
so lovely it is sure to attract the love of your
life We saw this in Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke
Ball Co.
3Misrepresentation (contd)
- Three types of pre-contractual statements
(contd) - Misrepresentation A statement that is binding
on the party that made it, not because it is part
of the contract, but because equity finds it
unjust that a person can benefit from the
statement - Breach of contract The statement is a term of
the contract, such that it is appropriate to
provide the remedies that we have seen (damages,
specific performance).
4Misrepresentation (contd)
- What Is It?
- Misrepresentation The making of a material
statement of fact which is relied upon and
induces the other party to enter into a contract,
where the material statement of fact later proves
to be untrue - Statement of fact A statement of fact, not
opinion
5Misrepresentation (contd)
- What Is It? (contd)
- Material If a reasonable person would not
believe this to be material, then it is not - Reliance and Inducement
- Assumed unless
- The representee knew the true state of affairs
- The representor can show some conduct by the
representee that indicates that the representee
was not relying on the representation
6Misrepresentation (contd)
- So, there are two streams to go through when you
want to get a remedy for a pre-contractual
statement - Misrepresentation
- Innocent Misrepresentation
- Equitable Cause of Action
- Rescission Put the parties in the position they
would have been in had the contract never been
entered into in the first place
7Misrepresentation (contd)
- Barriers
- Affirmation Approving the contract after you
know the truth - Laches Undue delay in bringing the action
- Execution of the Contract Enforced relatively
strictly in sales of land and securities
otherwise, a derivate of laches
8Misrepresentation (contd)
- Barriers (contd)
- Third party rights Essentially, you cannot do
harm to the interests of innocent third parties - Restitutio in integrum is impossible We cannot
put the parties back into the position they would
have been in had the contract never been entered
into in the first place
9Misrepresentation (contd)
- Negligent Misrepresentation You will cover this
in Torts and Compensation Systems - Fraudulent Misrepresentation
- Common law remedy for the tort of deceit
- Damages and perhaps rescission
- Derry v. Peek
10Misrepresentation (contd)
- Term of the Contract
- Damages
- Specific Performance
11Misrepresentation (contd)
- Derry v. Peek
- 1889 English House of Lords
- Facts
- Guy bought shares on the strength of a
representation that the companys tramways would
be moved by steam or other mechanical means in
the prospectus a document designed to sell
shares of the company. It turns out that the
company has to use horse power, unless the Board
of Trade agreed, which they would not.
12Derry v. Peek (contd)
- Case for fraudulent misrepresentation
- More is required that proof of a
misrepresentation of a material fact (paragraph
11) - Paragraph 11
- Where rescission is claimed it is only necessary
to prove that there was, misrepresentation then,
however honestly it may have been made, however
free from blame the person who made it, the
contract., having been obtained by
misrepresentation, cannot stand. (But this only
applies to innocent misrepresentation)
13Derry v. Peek (contd)
- Paragraph 12
- I mean those cases where a person within whose
special province it lay to know a particular
fact, has given an erroneous answer to an inquiry
made with regard to it by a person desirous of
ascertaining the fact for the purpose of
determining his course accordingly, and has been
held bound to make good the assurance he has
given.
14Derry v. Peek (contd)
- The difference between without any real belief
in its truth and carelessly - Recklessness v. Negligence (para. 15)
- The difference what constitutes fraud and how you
prove it - Just because someone says that they believed
something does not necessarily mean that they did
(para. 18).
15Derry v. Peek (contd)
- Fraud means (paragraph 19)
- knowingly false, or
- without belief in its truth, or
- recklessly, without giving a darn whether it be
true or false. - Motive is immaterial (paragraph 19)
16Misrepresentation (contd)
- Smith v. Land House Property Corp.
- 1884 English Court of Appeal
- Facts
- The sellers of a hotel told the buyers that the
tenant who was renting it was a most desirable
tenant. It turns out that there were several
problems with this particular tenant.
17Smith v. Land House Property Corp. (contd)
- Facts (contd)
- The plaintiff is seeking specific performance
the defendant is seeking rescission. The
plaintiff says that the pre-contractual statement
was nothing more than a statement of opinion. - Judgment
- Where the parties have equal knowledge, much of
what is said between the parties is opinion
18Smith v. Land House Property Corp. (contd)
- Paragraph 2
- But if the facts are not equally known to both
sides, then a statement of opinion by the one who
knows the facts best involves very often a
statement of a material fact, for he impliedly
states that he knows facts which justify his
opinion. Now a landlord knows the relations
between himself and his tenant, other persons
either do not know them at all or do not know
them equally well, and
19Smith v. Land House Property Corp. (contd)
- Paragraph 2 (contd)
- if the landlord says that he considers that
relations between himself and his tenant are
satisfactory, he really avers that the facts
peculiarly within his knowledge are such as to
render that opinion reasonable. Now are the
statements here statements which involved such a
representation of material facts? They are
statements on a subject as to which prima facie
the vendors know everything and the purchasers
nothing.
20Smith v. Land House Property Corp. (contd)
- Paragraph 2 (contd)
- amounts at least to an assertion that nothing has
occurred in the relations between the landlords
and the tenant which can be considered to make
the tenant an unsatisfactory one. That is an
assertion of a specific fact. Was it a true
assertion? Having regard to what took place
between Lady Day and Midsummer, I think that it
was not.
21Misrepresentation (contd)
- Ennis v. Klassen
- 1990 Manitoba Court of Appeal
- Facts
- Klassen owed a 1979 or 1980 BMW 728, a car which
cannot ordinarily be imported into Canada, but
came in illegally, but not by Klassen. Ennis
thought he was buying a 733. There is no such
thing as the 733 there is a 733i. There is more
horsepower in the 733i than the 728, and the 733i
has more safety features, and is more luxurious
than 728.
22Ennis v. Klassen (contd)
- Facts (contd)
- The car needed servicing twice shortly after
purchase. The second time it was taken into the
service, there is some evidence that the
defendant purchaser may have been told that this
was a 728, and not a 733i. - The defendant had been told that the vehicle was
referred to as a 728 in Europe (but might
actually be a 733 in this country). The defendant
thus wanted the dealer to sell the car on his
behalf. The dealer refused because it was
brought in illegally, and insurance concerns as a
728
23Ennis v. Klassen (contd)
- Facts (contd)
- Klassen tries to sell it privately as a 733i
- Ennis sees the ad
- Paragraph 14
- The plaintiff Ennis looked over the car and took
it for a test drive nearby. He could see for
himself the kind of bumper, wheels and
upholstery. He could see for himself that the
sun visor operated manually.
24Ennis v. Klassen (contd)
- Facts (contd)
- The plaintiff was not told
- No compliance with Canadian standards
- Engine size and horsepower
- Resale value
- In August, the plaintiff learned the truth, his
wife called Klassen to get him to take the car
back. Klassen refused. - In January 1988, the action was commenced. The
car was not driven at all since the plaintiff
learned the truth
25Ennis v. Klassen (contd)
- The trial judge held that the plaintiff got what
he bargained for. - The majority of the Court of Appeal says that
there is a clearly a misrepresentation of
material facts here (paragraph 23) - Rescission and indemnity v. damages (paragraph 25)
26Misrepresentation (contd)
- The misrepresentation stands until fixed by the
defendant Substantial (goes to the root of the
contract) - Rescission is possible unless there is a bar
- Execution is still a bar
- Two lines of cases
- Relative of delay (paragraph 29)
- Error in substantialibus
- Difference between land and chattels
27Misrepresentation (contd)
- Leaf v. International Galleries Ltd. (paragraphs
34-39) - Long v. Lloyd (paragraphs 40-42)
- Differences between this case and Long v. Lloyd
- Error in substantialibus This is the older line
of cases, this is still good law, but the
relative of delay cases are generally better to
use - Total failure of consideration
- Substantially different from what was bargained
for - Whenever the courts want to grant rescission of
an executed contract