Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Beswick v Beswick

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Decided
  
29 June 1967

End date
  
June 29, 1967

Transcript(s)
  
Full text of judgment

Beswick v Beswick

Citation(s)
  
[1968] AC 58[1967] UKHL 2

Prior action(s)
  
[1966] Ch 538, [1966] 3 WLR 396, [1966] 3 All ER 1

Judge(s) sitting
  
Lord ReidLord PearceLord UpjohnLord GuestLord Hodson

Ruling court
  
Judicial functions of the House of Lords

Similar
  
Tweddle v Atkinson, Scruttons Ltd v Midland, Jackson v Horizon Holidays, Smith and Snipes Hall Farm Ltd, Shanklin Pier Ltd v Detel Pro

Beswick v beswick 1968 ac 58


Beswick v Beswick [1967] UKHL 2, [1968] AC 58 is a landmark English contract law case on privity of contract and specific performance. The House of Lords disagreed with Lord Denning MR's dicta in the Court of Appeal that someone specifically intended to benefit from a contract could enforce it.

Contents

Today the position has been reversed by statute in the United Kingdom, and Lord Denning MR's decision has largely been given effect by the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999. However the case remains good law in many other common law jurisdictions.

Privity of contract and specific performance a remake of beswick v beswick 1967 ukhl


Facts

Lord Denning in the Court of Appeal started describing the facts of the case in the following way.

The agreement was that Peter assign his business to his nephew in consideration of the nephew employing him for the rest of his life and then paying a weekly annuity to Mrs Beswick. Since the latter term was for the benefit of someone not party to the contract, the nephew did not believe it was enforceable and so did not perform it, making only one payment of the agreed weekly amount of 5 pounds.

The nephew argued that as Mrs Beswick was not a party to the contract, she was not able to enforce it due to the doctrine of privity of contract.

Court of Appeal

Lord Denning held that Mrs Beswick was entitled to claim in her capacity as a third party intended to benefit from the contract. He said,

Danckwerts LJ and Salmon LJ concurred in the result, though not with Lord Denning's reasoning.

House of Lords

The House of Lords disagreed with Lord Denning in the Court of Appeal, that the law allowed third parties to sue to enforce benefits under a contract. However, they held that Mrs Beswick in her capacity as Mr Beswick's administratrix (i.e. as the person representing someone's estate who dies without a will) could enforce the nephew's promise to pay Mrs Beswick an annuity. Furthermore, Mrs Beswick was entitled to specific performance of the contract.

Lord Reid's judgment outlined the details, with which Lords Hodson, Pearce, Upjohn and Guest concurred.

Significance

In Smith and Snipes Hall Farm Ltd v River Douglas Catchment Board [1949] 2 KB 500, 514, Denning LJ had already tried to dispose of the English doctrine of privity. He had said,

In Australia, Coulls v. Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd (1967) 119 CLR 460 shows the approach has been similar. Here the contract was between a husband (Mr Coulls) and a company (Bagot's). Mrs Coulls was not a party to it. Even if she was, she would not be able to enforce it, as she gave no consideration. Bagots was entitled to the benefit of this contract as executor of Mr Coull's Estate.

Many people, including judges had called for statutory reform and in England this came in the form of the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, which gives a general right to enforce the benefit of a contract when one was either expressly identified as being able to enforce it, or one was intended to benefit.

References

Beswick v Beswick Wikipedia