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Foodtown Supermarkets Ltd v Commerce Commission

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Decided
  
14 June 1990

Judge(s) sitting
  
Jefferies J

Ruling court
  
High Court of New Zealand

Citation(s)
  
[1991] 1 NZLR 466

End date
  
June 14, 1990

Foodtown Supermarkets Ltd v Commerce Commission

Full case name
  
Foodtown Supermarkets Ltd v Commerce Commission

Foodtown Supermarkets Ltd v Commerce Commission [1991] 1 NZLR 466 is a cited case in New Zealand regarding the concept of invitation to treat, can be now considered as legally binding offers under the Fair Trading Act 1986.

Contents

Background

An investigation by the Commerce Commission revealed numerous instances where Foodtown Supermarkets had products on its shelves that were different when they were rung up at checkout, although in most cases, the prices were changed at checkout when they were notified of these anomalies.

As a result, the Commerce Commission filed criminal charges under section 13(g) of the Fair Trading Act.

Foodtown defended the charges by claiming that under the law a price on a shelf is merely an invitation to treat, and not a formal offer of sale, which the retailer in Fisher v Bell [1961] 1 QB 394 successfully pleaded in court.

Foodtown was convicted, and they appealed.

Held

The court upheld the conviction.

References

Foodtown Supermarkets Ltd v Commerce Commission Wikipedia