SBSMBL - Law of Contract
SBSMBL - Law of Contract
SBSMBL - Law of Contract
LAW OF CONTRACT
Definition of Contract
3
Examples of types of contract
• Employment
• Sale of goods
• Insurance
• Services - banking, medical treatment, building contracts
• Scholarship
Elements of Contract
1) Offer
2) Acceptance of the offer
3) Consideration
4) Intention to create legal relations
5) Certainty
6) Legal capacity
7) Free consent
8) Legality of object
9) Formalities
Offer
• Section 2(a) CA: when one person signifies to another his willingness to do or to
abstain from doing anything, with a view to obtaining the assent of that other
to the act or abstinence, he is said to make a proposal
• A proposal must be a definite promise to be bound
• s.2(c) CA - the person making the proposal is called the “promisor”
• The promisor/offeror must have declared his readiness to undertake an
obligation upon certain terms. Acceptance or refusal of the offer is by the
offeree
• Affin Credit (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd v Yap Yuen Fui [1984] MLJ 169 – where there
was a lack of offer and acceptance the purported hire purchase agreement was
declared void ab initio (void from the beginning) (condition precedent in s.4(1)
of the Hire-Purchase Act were not met and the offer was subject to the
condition precedent being met)
• An offer must be communicated to be effective
• 4(1) CA - the communication of a proposal is complete when it comes
to the knowledge of the person to whom it is made
• Express offer – in words (oral or written)
• Implied offer – other than in words e.g. by conduct
• s.9 CA – a proposal can be express (oral/writing) or implied (by
conduct)
• An offer must be distinguished with option or advertisement
Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Boots Cash Chemist Ltd
[1953] 1 QB 401
Partridge v Crittenden [1968] 2 All ER 421
Majumder v Ag of Sarawak [1967] 1 MLJ 101
Eckhardt Marine GMBH v Sheriff, High Court of Malaya, Seremban &
Ors [2001] 4 MLJ 49
• Contrast with:
Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co Ltd v [1893] 1 QB 256
• An offer must be distinguished with an invitation to treat (ITT) – an
offer to consider offers
• Examples of ITT:
1) Auctions
2) Advertisement of tenders
3) Catalogues
4) Price Lists
5) Goods displayed in shop windows and shelves
• EON Bank Bhd v BH Steel Sdn Bhd & Anor [2005] 2 MLJ 753
Acceptance
• s.2(b) CA - when the person to whom the proposal is made signifies
his assent thereto, the proposal is said to be accepted: a proposal,
when accepted, becomes a promise
• s.2(c) CA - the person accepting the proposal is called the “promisee”
• s.7 (a) CA – For a proposal to be converted into a promise the
acceptance must be absolute and unqualified s.9 CA – an acceptance
can be express (oral/writing) or implied (by conduct)
Lau Brothers & Co v China Pacific Navigation Co Ltd [1965] 1 MLJ 1 – if
the parties are still negotiating, an agreement is not yet formed
• Counter offer – Hyde v Wrench [1840] 49 ER 132
• Acceptance must be made within a reasonable time
Ramsgate Victoria Hotel Co Ltd v Montefiore [1866] LR 1 EXCH 109
Macon Works Trading Sdn Bhd v Phang Hon Chin & Anor [1976] 2 MLJ
177 – an offer lapses after a reasonable time not because this must be
implied in the offer but because failure to accept within a reasonable
time implies rejection by the offeree
• s.7(b) CA - For a proposal to be converted into a promise the
acceptance must be and expressed in some usual and reasonable
manner, unless the proposal prescribes the manner in which it is to be
accepted
• A proposer cannot prescribe silence as a manner of acceptance –
Felthouse v Bindley [1862] 142 ER 1037
• Revocation of proposals and acceptances
2) Performance
• General rule – performance of a contract must be exact, precise and should be
in accordance with what the parties had promised
• s. 38(1) CA – parties to a contract must either perform or offer to perform their
respective promises, unless such performance has been dispensed with any law
• Non performance as agreed may render the contract frustrated
3) Breach
• Where a party fails to perform their obligations as agreed, they are in
breach of contract
• A breach may occur in any of the following ways:
a) Failure to comply with a term of the contract
b) By a party announcing to the other party that they are no longer
interested in carrying out their obligations prior to the time for
performance
c) A delay in the performance where time is of the essence of the
contract
4) Agreement
• Both parties agree to end the contract
Remedies for Breach of Contract
1) Damages
• Monetary compensation
• Not awarded to punish the wrongdoer but to put the injured party back in the position
that they would have occupied if the contract had been performed as intended
• s.74 CA
2) Specific performance
• Discretionary order granted by the courts directing a person to carry out their obligations
under the contract
• Only suitable if damages are not an adequate remedy
• Specific Relief Act 1950
3) Rescission
• Allows the innocent party to cancel the contract by rescinding it
• Purpose – to reverse the contract and restore the parties to as near as practicable to
their original pre-contractual positions, relieving each party of their obligations and
permitting recovery of any benefits conferred on each other
4) Restitution
• Also known as restoration
• It does not rely on the plaintiff suffering loss or damage
• Its basis is unjust enrichment i.e. it would be very unfair if the defendant was
allowed to retain the money, goods or services, without payment
5) Injunction
• Discretionary court order
• Will not be awarded if damages are adequate remedy
• An injunction may be:
a) Prohibitory – preventing the breach of contract
b) Mandatory – requiring a person to perform some contractual obligations
c) Interlocutory – maintains the status quo between the parties until the
dispute can be heard by the court
Reading list and references:
1) Mei Pheng Lee & Ivan Jeron Detta, Commercial Law, Third Edition,
Oxford Fajar (2017) – Chapter 2
2) Dr Syed Ahmad Alsagoff – Principles of the Law of Contract in
Malaysia, Fourth Edition, LexisNexis (2015)
3) Contracts Act 1950
4) Specific Relief Act 1950
5) Age of Majority Act 1971