Amendment: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
no edit summary
(Created page with "The art of varying the agreed terms of a {{tag|contract}}. It requires both parties to agree to the amendment. That’s more or less it. ===No oral modification=== W...")
 
No edit summary
Line 14: Line 14:
Good, that’s that all sorted and we can now all move on to more important issues of the d —
Good, that’s that all sorted and we can now all move on to more important issues of the d —


BUT WAIT. The Supreme Court disagrees. Lord Sumption (for it was he) dismissed this “fallacious” reasoning: a chap’s autonomy operates until he has made his contract; thereafter only as far as the original contract allows.  
BUT WAIT. The Supreme Court has disagreed. Lord Sumption (for it was he) dismissed this “fallacious” reasoning: a chap’s autonomy operates until he has made his contract; thereafter only as far as the original contract allows.  


Quoth milord: “The real offence against party autonomy is the suggestion that they cannot bind themselves as to the form of any variation, even if that is what they have agreed.”
Quoth milord: “The real offence against party autonomy is the suggestion that they cannot bind themselves as to the form of any variation, even if that is what they have agreed.”


But what if contracting parties have relied on a non-compliant variation in good faith, and by their conduct abided by it for a good period? as have so many of his brother judges done in the past, here Lord Sumption looked lovingly towards the courts of chancery in the defendant’s aid. A wringed party might seek to argue [[estoppel]]. However, the scope of this estoppel will be limited; "at the very least, there would have to be some words or conduct unequivocally representing that the variation was valid notwithstanding its informality and  something more would be required for this purpose than the informal promise itself".
But what if contracting parties have relied on a non-compliant variation in good faith, and by their conduct abided by it for a good period? as have so many of his brother judges done in the past, here Lord Sumption looked lovingly towards the courts of chancery in the defendant’s aid. A wringed party might seek to argue [[estoppel]]. However, the scope of this estoppel will be limited; "at the very least, there would have to be some words or conduct unequivocally representing that the variation was valid notwithstanding its informality and  something more would be required for this purpose than the informal promise itself".
Common sense has taken a bit of a battering, but this is all good news for we [[Mediocre lawyer|learned wordwrights]] who can now be prayed upon to paper otherwise unnecessary [[amendment agreement]]s for merchants to vouchsafe their obvious commercial intent.

Navigation menu