Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly
Failure of basis
Ralph Cunnington *
This article considers the restitutionary claim for failure of consideration with particular reference to the recent High Court of Australia decision in
Roxborough v.
Rothmans. It is suggested that failure of consideration focuses on performance rather than promise and is therefore better labelled ‘‘failure of basis’’. It is further argued that restitution should be available for partial failure of consideration where counter-restitution is relatively simple. Finally, it is asserted that the traditional bar against restitution under subsisting contracts is stated too widely. Instead, in circumstances where there is a gap in the contractual allocation of risk, restitution should be allowed. In
Roxborough there was such a gap in the contractual allocation of risk but the payments made were paid in exchange for the agreed quantity of tobacco—a basis that did not fail
.
A. INTRODUCTION
Failure of consideration is one of the most important and hotly debated grounds for restitution. In the past half century there has been a commendable drive to see failure of consideration broken free from the shackles of the old common counts and the implied contract fiction. The landmark case of Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna
v. Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd
,1
clarified the meaning of failure of consideration and distinguished consideration in the formation of a contract from restitutionary failure of consideration. The case also overruled Chandler
v. Webster
2
and the fiction that a claim for total failure of consideration required the contract to be rescinded ab initio
. More recently the ‘‘total failure’’ requirement has been called into question,3
as has the requirement that the
* Lecturer in Law, University of Birmingham. I am very grateful for all the helpful comments I received when I presented an earlier version of this article at the Society of Legal Scholars Conference in Oxford on 18 September 2003. In particular, I would like to thank Professor Michael Bryan for his valuable comments on an earlier draft of the article.
1. [1943] AC 32, 48; (1942) 73 Ll L Rep 4, per
Viscount Simon LC.
2. [1904] 1 KB 493.
3. See E. McKendrick, ‘‘Total Failure of Consideration and Counter Restitution: Two Issues or One?’’, ch 8 of P. Birks (ed), Laundering and Tracing
(Oxford, 1995); P. Birks, ‘‘Failure of Consideration’’, ch 9 of F.D. Rose (ed), Consensus Ad Idem: Essays on the Law of Contract in Honour of Guenter Treitel
(London, 1996); G. Virgo, The Principles of the Law of Restitution
(Oxford, 1999) (hereafter ‘‘Virgo’’), 341–344; A. Burrows, The Law of Restitution
, 2nd edn (London, 2002) (hereafter ‘‘Burrows’’), 333–336; J. Edelman, ‘‘The New Doctrine of Partial Failure of Consideration’’ (1996–1997) 15 Aus Bar Rev 229.
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