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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Entores Ltd v Miles Far East Corporation [1955] EWCA Civ 3 (17 May 1955)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1955/3.html
Cite as: [1955] 3 WLR 48, [1955] 2 All ER 493, [1955] 1 Lloyd's Rep 511, [1955] EWCA Civ 3, [1955] 2 QB 327

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JISCBAILII_CASE_CONTRACT

BAILII Citation Number: [1955] EWCA Civ 3

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE.
COURT OF APPEAL.

Royal Courts of Justice.
17th May 1955.

B e f o r e :

LORD JUSTICE DENNING
LORD JUSTICE BIRKETT
and
LORD JUSTICE PARKER

____________________

Between:
ENTORES LIMITED

-v-

MILES FAR EAST CORPORATION

____________________

(Transcript of the Shorthand Notes of The Association of Official Shorthandwriters, Ltd.,
Room 392, Royal Courts of Justice, and 2, New Square, Lincoln's Inn. London, W.C.2.)

____________________

MR GERALD GARDINER, Q.C. and MR S.B.R. COOKE (instructed by Messrs Allen & Overy)
appeared on behalf of the Appellants (Defendants).
MR MAURICE LYELL, Q.C. and MR DENNIS LLOYD (instructed by Messrs Smiles & Co.)
appeared on behalf of the Respondents (Plaintiffs).

____________________

HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
____________________

Crown Copyright ©

    LORD JUSTICE DENNING: This is an application for leave to serve notice of a writ out of the jurisdiction. The grounds are that the action is brought to recover damages for breach of a contract made within the jurisdiction or by implication to be governed by English law.

    The Plaintiffs are an English company. The Defendants are an American corporation with agents all over the world, including a Dutch company in Amsterdam. The Plaintiffs say that the contract was made by Telex between the Dutch company in Amsterdam and the English company in London. Communications by Telex are comparatively new. Each company has a teleprinter machine in its office; and each has a Telex number like a telephone number. When one company wishes to send a message to the other, it gets the Post Office to connect up the machines. Then a clerk at one end taps the message on to his machine just as if it were a typewriter and it is instantaneously passed to the machine at the other end which automatically types the message on to paper at that end.

    The relevant Telex messages in this case were as follows:

    8th September, 1954:

    Dutch company:

    "Offer for account our associates Miles Far East Corporation Tokyo up to 400 tons Japanese cathodes sterling 240 longton c.i.f, shipment Mitsui Line September 28th or October 10th payment by letter of credit. Your reply Telex Amsterdam 12174 or phone 31490 before 4 p.m.invited".

    English company:

    "Accept 100 longtons cathodes Japanese shipment latest October 10th sterling 239. 10. 0. longton c.i.f. London/ Rotterdam payment letter of credit stop please confirm latest tomorrow".

    Dutch company:

    "We received O.K. Thank you".

    9th September, 1954:

    English company:

    "Regarding our telephone conversation a few minutes ago we note that there is a query on the acceptance of our bid for 100 tons payment in sterling and you are ascertaining that your Tokyo office will confirm the price to be longton we therefore await to hear from you further".

    10th September, 1954:

    English company: "Is the price for the sterling cathodes understood to be for longton by Japan as you were going to find this out yesterday?". Dutch company: "Yes, price 239.10.0. for longton".

    At that step there was a completed contract by which the Defendants agreed to supply 100 tons of cathodes at a price of £239. 10s. 0d. a ton. The offer was sent by Telex from England offering to pay £239. 10s. 0d. for 100 tons and accepted by Telex from Holland. The question for our determination is where was the contract made?

    When a contract is made by post it is clear law throughout the common law countries that the acceptance is complete as soon as the letter is put into the post box, and that is the place where the contract is made. But there is no clear rule about contracts made by telephone or by Telex. Communications by these means are virtually instantaneous and stand on a different footing.

    The problem can only be solved by going in stages. Let me first consider a case where two people make a contract by word of mouth in the presence of one another. Suppose, for instance, that I shout an offer to a man across a river or a courtyard but I do not hear his reply because it is drowned by an aircraft flying overhead. There is no contract at that moment. If he wishes to make a contract ? he must wait till the aircraft is gone and then shout back his acceptance so that I can hear what he says. Not until I have his answer am I bound. I do not agree with the observations of Mr Justice Hill in Newcomb v. De Roos (1859) 2, Ellis & Ellis at page 275.

    Now take a case where two people make a contract by telephone. Suppose, for instance, that I make an offer to a man by telephone and, in the middle of his reply, the line goes "dead" so that I do not hear his words of acceptance. There is no contract at that moment. The other man may not know the precise moment when the line failed. But he will know that the telephone conversation was abruptly broken off: because people usually say something to signify the end of the conversation. If he wishes to make a contract, he must therefore get through again so as to make sure that I heard. Suppose next that the line does not go dead, but it is nevertheless so Indistinct that I do not catch what he says and I ask him to repeat it. He then repeats it and I hear his acceptance. The contract is made, not on the first time when I do not hear, but only the second time when I do hear. If he does not repeat it, there is no contract. The contract is only complete when I have his answer accepting the offer.

    Lastly take the Telex. Suppose a clerk in a London office taps out on the teleprinter an offer which is immediately recorded on a teleprinter in a Manchester office, and a clerk at that end taps out an acceptance. If the line goes dead in the middle of the sentence of acceptance, the teleprinter motor will stop. There is then obviously no contract. The clerk at Manchester must get through again and send his complete sentence. But it may happen that the line does not go dead, yet the message does not get through to London. Thus the clerk at Manchester may tap out his message of acceptance and it will not be recorded in London because the ink at the London end fails or something of that kind. In that case the Manchester clerk will not know of the failure but the London clerk will know of it and will immediately send back a message "not receiving". Then, when the fault is rectified, the Manchester clerk will repeat his message. Only then is there a contract. If he does not repeat it, there is no contract. It is not until his message is received that the contract is complete.

    In all the instances I have taken so far, the man who sends the message of acceptance knows that it has not been received or he has reason to know it. So he must repeat it. But suppose that he does not know that his message did not get home. He thinks it has. This may happen if the listener on the telephone does not catch the words of acceptance, but nevertheless does not trouble to ask for them to be repeated: or the ink on the teleprinter fails at the receiving end, but the clerk does not ask for the message to be repeated: so that the man who sends an acceptance reasonably believes that his message has been received. The offeror in such circumstances is clearly bound, because he will be estopped from saying that he did not receive the message of acceptance. It is his own fault that ho did not get it. But if there should be a case where the offeror without any fault on his part does not receive the message of acceptance - yet the sender of it reasonably believes it has got home when it has not - then I think there is no contract.

    My conclusion is that the rule about instantaneous communications between the parties is different from the rule about the post. The contract is only complete when the acceptance is received by the offeror; and the contract is made at the place where the acceptance is received.

    In a matter of this kind, however, it is very important that the countries of the world should have the same rule. I find that most of the European countries have substantially the same rule as that I have stated. Indeed they apply it to contracts by post as well as instantaneous communications. But in the United States of America it appears as if instantaneous communications are treated in the same way as postal communications. In view of this divergence, I think we must consider the matter on principle: and so considered, I have come to the view I have stated, and I am glad to see that Professor Winfield in this country (55 Law Quarterly Review, 514) and Professor Williston in the United States of America (Contracts I S. 82, 239) take the same view.

    Applying the principles which I have stated, I think that the contract in this case was made in London where the acceptance was received. It was therefore a proper case for service out of the jurisdiction.

    Apart from the contract by Telex, the Plaintiffs put the case in another way. They say that the contract by Telex was varied by letter posted in Holland and accepted by conduct in England: and that this amounted to a new contract made in England. The Dutch company on 11th September, 1954, wrote a letter to the English company saying:

    "We confirm having sold to you for account of our associates in Tokyo: 100 metric tons: electrolitic copper in cathodes: £239. 10s. 0d. for longton c.i.f. U.K./Continental main ports: prompt shipment from a Japanese port after receipt of export licence: payment by irrevocable and transferable letter of credit to be opened in favour of Miles Far East Corporation with a first class Tokyo Bank. The respective import licences to be sent directly without delay to Miles Far Last Corporation."

    The variations consisted in the ports of delivery, the provisions of import licence and so forth. The English company say that they accepted the variations by despatching from London the import licence and giving instructions in London for the opening of the letter of credit, and that this was an acceptance by conduct which was complete as soon as the acts were done in London.

    I am not sure that this argument about variations is correct. It may well be that the contract is made at the place where first completed, not at the place where the variations are agreed. But whether this be so or not, I think the variations were accepted by conduct in London and were therefore made in England. Both the original contract and ensuing variations were made in England and leave can properly be given for service out of the jurisdiction.

    I am inclined to think also that the contract is by implication to be governed by English law, because England is the place with which it has the closest connection.

    I think the decisions of the Master and the Judge were right and I would dismiss the appeal.

    LORD JUSTICE BIRKETT: I can state very briefly my agreement with the Judgment just delivered by my Lord.

    Entores Ltd. wished to bring an action against Miles Far East Corporation for damages for breach of contract. Entores Ltd. are a company registered and resident in England, the registered office being in the City of London.

    Miles Far East Corporation are a corporation with headquarters at 150 Broadway, New York, in the State of New York. In September of 1954 a series of communications passed between Entores and Miles by means of an equipment called Telex Service, consisting of a teleprinter and signalling unit and certain necessary subsidiary apparatus possessed by both parties. The communications are virtually instantaneous, for the moment one party types out the message the other party ought to be receiving it in the ordinary course of things.

    Entores Ltd. claim they entered into a contract with Miles for the purchase of copper cathodes and they seek to issue a writ claiming damages for the breach of the contract by Miles. They were given leave to serve notice of a writ upon the Defendants in New York out of the jurisdiction. This appeal is against a decision of Mr Justice Donovan dismissing the appeal against the Order giving leave.

    The Plaintiffs contend that the contract was made in England and therefore comes within Order 11 Rule 1 of the Supreme Court Rules where the Court or a Judge may allow service of a writ outside the jurisdiction, where the action is one brought against a Defendant for damages for breach of a contract made within the jurisdiction. The Defendants say the contract was not made in England but was made in Holland.

    There were several Telex communications but the important one for this appeal is the counter offer of the 8th September, 1954, made by the Plaintiff in London, and the acceptance from the Defendants was received from them in London also, on the 10th September, 1954.

    I am of opinion that in the case of Telex communications (which do not differ in principle from the cases where the parties negotiating a contract were actually in the presence of each other) there can be no binding contract until the offeror receives notice of the acceptance from the offeree.

    Mr Gardiner submitted that the proper principle to be applied to a case like the present could be thus stated:

    "If A makes an offer to B, there is a concluded contract when B has done all that he can do to communicate his acceptance by approved methods".

    He further submitted that great difficulties would arise if Telex communications were treated differently from acceptances by post or telegram.

    In my opinion the cases governing the making of contracts by letters passing through the post have no application to the making of contracts by Telex communications.

    The ordinary rule of law, to which the special considerations governing contracts by post are exceptions, is that the acceptance of an offer must be communicated to the offeror and the place where the contract is made is the place where the offeror receives the notification of the acceptance by the offeree.

    If a Telex instrument in Amsterdam is used to send to London the notification of the acceptance of an offer the contract is complete when the Telex instrument in London receives the notification of the acceptance (usually at the same moment that the message is being printed in Amsterdam) and the acceptance is then notified to the offeror, and the contract is made in London.

    Such were the facts in this appeal, and I agree with the Judgment of Mr Justice Donovan and this appeal should be dismissed.

    LORD JUSTICE PARKER: I have come to the same conclusion, and would only add a few words on the basis that the contract sued on is that created by the Telex messages.

    As was said by Lord Justice Lindley in Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. (1893, 1 Queen's Bench, 256, at page 262):

    "Unquestionably, as a general proposition, when an offer is made, it is necessary in order to make a binding contract, not only that it should be accepted, but that the acceptance should be notified".

    At page 269 in the same case Lord Justice Bowen said:

    "One cannot doubt that, as an ordinary rule of law, an acceptance of an offer ought to be notified to the person who makes the offer, in order that the two minds may come together. Unless this is done the two minds may be apart, and there is not that consensus which is necessary according to English law - I say nothing about the laws of other countries - to make a contract".

    Accordingly, as a general rule, a binding contract is made at the place where the offeror receives notification of the acceptance, that is where the offeror is.

    Since, however, the requirement as to actual notification of the acceptance is for the benefit of the offeror he may waive it and agree to the substitution for that requirement of some other conduct by the acceptor. He may do so expressly as in the advertisement cases by intimating that he is content with the performance of a condition. Again he may do so impliedly by indicating a contemplated method of acceptance, for example, by post or telegram. In such a case he does not expressly dispense with actual notification, but he is held to have done so impliedly on grounds of expediency. Thus in Adams v. Lindsell (1818) 1 Barnewall and Anderson, 683, the Court pointed out that unless this were so

    "no contract could ever be completed by the post. For if the defendants were not bound by their offer when accepted by the plaintiffs till the answer was received, then the plaintiffs ought not to be bound till after they had received notification that the defendants had received their answer and assented to it. And so it might go on ad infinitum".

    Again in Dunlop v. Higgins (1848) 1 House of Lords Cases, 381, the Lord Chancellor, Lord Cottenham, pointed out at page 400 that

    "Common sense tells us that transactions cannot go on without such a rule"

    and in Harris' case, (1872) 7 Chancery Appeals, 587. Lord Justice Hellish at page 594 referred to the mischievous consequences which would follow in commerce if no such rule was adopted. To the same effect is the Judgment of Lord Justice Thesiger in Household Fire Insurance Co. v. Grant, (1879) 4 Exchequer Division, 216, in which he points out that where the parties are at a distance the balance of convenience dictates that the contract shall be deemed complete when the acceptance is handed to the Post Office.

    Where, however, the parties are in each other's presence or, though separated in space, communication between them is in effect instantaneous there is no need for any such rule of convenience. To hold otherwise would leave no room for the operation of the general rule that notification of the acceptance must be received. An acceptor could say: "I spoke the words of acceptance in your presence, albeit softly, and it matters not that you did not hear me", or: "I telephoned to you and accepted and it matters not that the telephone went dead and you did not get my message". Though in both these cases the acceptor was using the contemplated or indeed the expressly indicated mode of communication there is no room for any implication that the offeror waived actual notification of the acceptance. It follows that I cannot agree with the observations of Mr Justice Hill in Newcomb v. De Roos, (1889) 2 Ellis & Ellis at page 275.

    So far as Telex messages are concerned, though the despatch and receipt of a message is not completely instantaneous the parties ' are to all intents and purposes in each other s presence just as if they were in telephonic communication, and I can see no reason for departing from the general rule that there is no binding contract until notice of the acceptance is received by the offeror.

    That being so and since the offer --- a counter-offer -- was made by the Plaintiffs in London and notification of the acceptance was received by them in London the contract resulting therefrom was made in London.

    I would accordingly dismiss the appeal.

    MR DENNIS LLOYD: I would ask your Lordships that the appeal should be dismissed with costs.

    LORD JUSTICE DENNING: Yes, appeal dismissed with costs in any event.

    MR COOKE: Would your Lordships give me leave to take the matter further? It is a matter of some considerable importance. It appears that communications of this kind are on the increase and your Lordships have at any rate disposed of a certain amount of authority. I think your Lordships have also indicated that the Courts here may depart from the rule which the American Courts have observed with regard to the telephone.

    LORD JUSTICE DENNING: This is an interlocutory appeal. It means that the trial of the action will be still further held up.

    MR COOKE: We do not wish to hold up the trial of the action further than necessary. On the other hand, it is an American corporation trading all over the world. It is a matter of considerable importance to them and others in like position as to what their position really is.

    (Their Lordships conferred).

    LORD JUSTICE DENNING: On the whole we do not think that we ourselves should give leave to appeal.

    MR COOKE: I am much obliged, my Lord.


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