Waiver by estoppel: Difference between revisions

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The other kind of [[waiver]]. The ''difficult'' one. Though not half as perilous as [[Mediocre lawyer|your earnest counsel]] may have you believe.
{{a|contract|}}The other kind of [[waiver]]. The ''difficult'' one. Though not half as perilous as [[Mediocre lawyer|your earnest counsel]] may have you believe.


[[Waiver by estoppel]] is when a party is entitled to exercise contractual rights, but by its conduct leads the other party to believe it will not so that party relies on that representation to its detriment. It is an outflowering of the great case of {{citern|Hughes|Metropolitan Railway|1877|2 App. Cas.|439}}
[[Waiver by estoppel]] may arise when a party who is entitled to exercise contractual rights, by its conduct ''leads the other party to believe it will not'', so that ''the other party relies on that representation'' to its detriment. It is an outflowering of the great case of {{citern|Hughes|Metropolitan Railway|1877|2 App. Cas.|439}}.
 
So: some kind of '''[[representation]]'''; and a '''reliance''' on the representation to the receiving party’s detriment.


===Ingredients===
===Ingredients===
*A legal relationship between the “rightsholder” and the “beneficiary” giving rise to rights and obligations;
For us to even be in the ballpark for waiver by estoppel, therefore, you need:
*A clear [[representation]] by the rightsholder that it will not enforce its strict rights — it can be implied but it must be unequivocal<ref>Chitty muses that it needs to be as certain as would give it contractual effect if supported by consideration</ref> In any case the point here is to differentiate between someone representing that they will not enforce a contractual term — entitling a counterparty to rely on that representation — and simply granting an indulgence and not strictly enforcing a term. The latter will ''not'' give rise to a waiver.  
*'''Relationship''': A legal relationship — maybe a [[contract]], maybe something statutory — between the “rightsholder” and the “beneficiary” creating the rights and obligations;
*The beneficiary must rely on the representation to its detriment, so as to make it inequitable for the rightsholder to go back on the representation.
*'''Representation''': A clear [[representation]] by the rightsholder that it will not strictly enforce its rights — the representation need not be written or explicit, but it must be ''unequivocal''<ref>Chitty muses that it needs to be as certain as would have given it contractual effect had it been supported by [[consideration]].</ref> In any case, the point here is to differentiate between someone unambiguously giving the impression that they will not enforce a contractual term — entitling a counterparty to rely on that representation — and a rightsholder simply ''refraining from enforcing a term of the contract it was entitled to''. The latter will ''not'' give rise to a [[Waiver by estoppel|waiver]].  
*Unlike [[waiver by election]], generally [[waiver by estoppel]] is suspensory and not permanent — unless it would be inequitable to allow the waiver to be withdrawn.
*'''Reliance''': The beneficiary must actually rely on the [[representation]] to its detriment ...
*'''Inequity''': ... so as to make it ''inequitable for the rightsholder to go back on the [[representation]]''.
 
===Effect===
*Unlike [[waiver by election]], generally a [[waiver by estoppel]] only suspends the rightsholder’s legal rights and does not permanently extinguish them — unless it would be inequitable to allow the waiver to be withdrawn.


===Observations===
===Observations===

Revision as of 11:10, 21 May 2019

The basic principles of contract


Formation: capacity and authority · representation · misrepresentation · offer · acceptance · consideration · intention to create legal relations · agreement to agree · privity of contract oral vs written contract · principal · agent

Interpretation and change: governing law · mistake · implied term · amendment · assignment · novation
Performance: force majeure · promise · waiver · warranty · covenant · sovereign immunity · illegality · severability · good faith · commercially reasonable manner · commercial imperative · indemnity · guarantee
Breach: breach · repudiation · causation · remoteness of damage · direct loss · consequential loss · foreseeability · damages · contractual negligence · process agent
Remedies: damages · adequacy of damages ·equitable remedies · injunction · specific performance · limited recourse · rescission · estoppel · concurrent liability
Not contracts: Restitutionquasi-contractquasi-agency

Index: Click to expand:

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The other kind of waiver. The difficult one. Though not half as perilous as your earnest counsel may have you believe.

Waiver by estoppel may arise when a party who is entitled to exercise contractual rights, by its conduct leads the other party to believe it will not, so that the other party relies on that representation to its detriment. It is an outflowering of the great case of Hughes v Metropolitan Railway (1877) 2 App. Cas. 439.

So: some kind of representation; and a reliance on the representation to the receiving party’s detriment.

Ingredients

For us to even be in the ballpark for waiver by estoppel, therefore, you need:

  • Relationship: A legal relationship — maybe a contract, maybe something statutory — between the “rightsholder” and the “beneficiary” creating the rights and obligations;
  • Representation: A clear representation by the rightsholder that it will not strictly enforce its rights — the representation need not be written or explicit, but it must be unequivocal[1] In any case, the point here is to differentiate between someone unambiguously giving the impression that they will not enforce a contractual term — entitling a counterparty to rely on that representation — and a rightsholder simply refraining from enforcing a term of the contract it was entitled to. The latter will not give rise to a waiver.
  • Reliance: The beneficiary must actually rely on the representation to its detriment ...
  • Inequity: ... so as to make it inequitable for the rightsholder to go back on the representation.

Effect

  • Unlike waiver by election, generally a waiver by estoppel only suspends the rightsholder’s legal rights and does not permanently extinguish them — unless it would be inequitable to allow the waiver to be withdrawn.

Observations

  • A representation must be some kind of positive act: Simply not enforcing a term does not give rise to an estoppel or a waiver: “It is difficult to imagine how silence and inaction can be anything but equivocal”[2].
  • The estoppel is specific to the particular circumstance. If you have a recurring right (you know, like to make a margin call), then just because you waived it once — even if you somehow permanently waived it — that doesn't mean you have waived it for all time. Just because you didn’t enforce this time, that doesn’t mean you are prevented from ever enforcing in the future.

See also

References

  1. Chitty muses that it needs to be as certain as would have given it contractual effect had it been supported by consideration.
  2. Allied Marine Transport v Vale do Rio Doce Navegaçao SA (The Leonidas D.)