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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Photolibrary Group Ltd (t/a Garden Picture Library) & Ors v Burda Senator Verlag GmbH & Ors [2008] EWHC 1343 (QB) (18 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/1343.html Cite as: [2008] 2 All ER (Comm) 881, [2008] EWHC 1343 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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PHOTOLIBRARY GROUP LIMITED trading as GARDEN PICTURE LIBRARY (1) HARPUR GARDEN LIBRARY (a firm) (2) CLIVE NICHOLS GARDEN PICTURES (a firm) (3) ANDREW LAWSON trading as ANDREW LAWSON PHOTOGRAPHY (4) DEREK ST ROMAINE trading as GARDEN PHOTO LIBRARY (5) MARIANNE MAJERUS trading as MARIANNE MAJERUS PHOTOGRAPHY (6) ERIC CRICHTON PHOTOS (a firm) (7) GARDENPIX LIMITED (8) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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BURDA SENATOR VERLAG GmbH (1) VERLAG AENNE BURDA Gmbh & CO KG (2) BURDA PUBLISHING CENTRE GmbH (3) |
Defendants |
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Andrew Ayres and Thomas Munby (instructed by Dawsons LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 10 - 12 June 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Jack :
Introduction
The proceedings
'as to the terms on which the Claimants supplied their original analogue photographic transparencies to the Defendants'.
The primary question is whether the terms set out in the delivery notes form part of contracts made between the claimants and the publishing companies.
The claimants and their dealings with the defendants
"These images have been sent on loan. Discrepancies should be advised immediately. Images must be returned, or reproduction licence agreed, by the Date for Return below."
There is a space for the transparencies to be listed. It is then stated 'Please sign and return one copy to acknowledge safe receipt', and there is a space for signature and date. Then there appears 'Fee for loss or damage (see 7 over) an original £ . a print £ .. duplicate £ .'. Adjacent to that is 'Rental fee per week, per image (see 5 over) £ . I omit some other matters. Then is stated:
1. Any client who has not previously dealt with us on the terms and conditions set out overleaf and who does not wish to accept such terms and conditions must return all the images immediately . . The client will be deemed to have accepted our terms and conditions if all the Images are not returned within five days of their receipt.
2. Any client who has previously dealt with us on the terms and conditions set out overleaf will be deemed to have accepted them by virtue of having made the request for the Images referred to above.
4) "Return Date" is the date by which the Images must be returned as specified on the delivery note or licence. If no date is specified, the Return Date shall be four weeks from the date of the delivery note.
5) You must pay the rental fee specified in the delivery note until we receive the images back. .
7) You must immediately notify us in writing of any loss or damages. You must pay us compensation for each Image lost or damaged at the rates specified on the delivery note which are a genuine pre-estimate of the loss we will suffer. . .
"However, after strenuous negotiations between ourselves and the German Insurance Company, we were able to agree compensation payments of £290.00 per picture which amounts to £30500.00 for the whole shipment. We feel that this represents a fair offer, particularly in view of the large number of GPL pictures we publish month after month. Like you, we are keen on continuing our good business relations and for that reason I hope that you are able to accept this offer."
Sally Wood did accept the offer. She prepared an invoice to cover the payment. It began 'for the loss of 105 transparencies from one complete delivery note no. dated 2/3/2000 consignment at the agreed rate of £290.48 per picture. This conceded from our usual rate of £500 per picture in recognition of our otherwise good business relations.'
FULL TERMS AND CONDITIONS OVERLEAF. PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING:
1. Pictures are the client's responsibility until received back by supplier. They should be returned by registered post or insured courier.
2. Minimum compensation for loss or damage £500.
3. The service charge quoted may be varied or waived at the supplier's discretion, according to the number of pictures used.
4. A holding fee of £2 per week may be charged for pictures held beyond the return date, unless an extension has been agreed.
"As I have not supplied transparencies to the magazine for some years now, please will you read the conditions of the delivery note. If they are acceptable I shall look forward to a signed delivery note in acknowledgement of the safe arrival of the package. If the magazine is unable to accept the terms and conditions, please arrange for the return of the transparencies ."
He received no response to his letter but the transparencies were not returned but were sent on to Germany. Mr Crichton said in cross-examination that as Burda had signed for the delivery of the transparencies, further confirmation was not required.
Authorities
"An alternative argument for the defendants, in this court as below, was to the effect that any contract between the parties was made before the defendants knew of the existence of the delivery note viz, either in the course of the preliminary telephone conversation between Mr. Beeching and Miss Fraser, or when the jiffy bag containing the transparencies was received in the defendants' premises but before the bag was opened. I regard these submissions as unrealistic and unarguable. The original telephone call was merely a preliminary inquiry and did not give rise to any contract. But the contract came into existence when the plaintiffs sent the transparencies to the defendants and the defendants, after opening the bag, accepted them by Mr Beeching's phone call to the plaintiffs at 3.10 on 5 March. The question is whether condition 2 was a term of that contract."
After an authoritative review of some of the leading authorities Bingham LJ stated at page 445:
"Turning to the present case, I am satisfied for reasons which Dillon L.J. has given that no contract was made on the telephone when the defendants made their initial request. I am equally satisfied that no contract was made on delivery of the transparencies to the defendants before the opening of the jiffy bag in which they were contained. Once the jiffy bag was opened and the transparencies taken out with the delivery note, it is in my judgment an inescapable inference that the defendants would have recognised the delivery note as a document of a kind likely to contain contractual terms and would have seen that there were conditions printed in small but visible lettering on the face of the document. To the extent that the conditions so displayed were common form or usual terms regularly encountered in this business, I do not think the defendants could successfully contend that they were not incorporated into the contract."
The court held that the term relied on was a particularly onerous clause and that insufficient had been done to bring it to the defendants' notice. If it had been a usual term it could have been relied on.
"A separate issue arises, however, as between Grimsdale and SAPPA. There were three contracts between Grimsdale and SAPPA. They were oral. The learned judge found that there had been frequent prior transactions between them. There had been three to four deals a month during the previous three years. The practice had been that Grimsdale would sent a contract note to SAPPA either later on the day of an oral contract or on the day following. SAPPA would expect to receive such a contract note. It was routine practice. The same practice was indeed followed when SAPPA bought this type of material (cakes and meals) from London wholesalers. On the back of the contract notes there were certain terms or conditions. Mr. Golden who acted for SAPPA knew that there were such conditions though he had not read them. One term on the contract notes was as follows: "The buyer under this contract takes the responsibility of any latent defects." It was the contention of Grimsdale (a) that the terms or conditions on the contract notes were terms of or were incorporated into the relevant contracts of sale and (b) that the above-quoted term operated, on the facts of the present case, to relieve Grimsdale from any liability to SAPPA. As to (a), the learned judge, after considering the case of McCutcheon v. David MacBrayne Ltd.[1964] 1 WLR 125, H.L., held that the conditions in the contract note were not incorporated into the contracts of sale. In agreement with all the members of the Court of Appeal I consider that they were. Over the course of a long period prior to the three oral contracts which are now in question SAPPA knew that when Grimsdale sold they did so on the terms that they had continuously made known to SAPPA. In the circumstances it is reasonable to hold that when SAPPA placed an order to buy they did so on the basis and with the agreement to sell would be on the terms and conditions set out on their contract notes to the extend to which they were applicable."
"Here, the parties were commercial companies. There had been a course of dealing in which at least 11 invoices had been sent giving notice that business was conducted on the IFF terms at a place on the document where it was plain to be seen. Mr. Zacaria knew that some terms applied. He knew that forwarding agents might impose terms which would frequently be standard terms and would sometimes or frequently deal with risk. He never sought to ask for or about the terms of business. The IFF conditions are not particularly onerous or unusual and, indeed, are in common use. In these circumstances, despite Mr. Gompertz's clear and succinct argument to the contrary. I consider that reasonable notice of the terms was given by the plaintiffs. Putting it another way, I consider that the defendants' conduct in continuing the course of business after at least 11 notices of the terms and omitting to request a sight of them would have led and did lead the plaintiffs reasonably to believe the defendants accepted their terms. In those circumstances it is irrelevant that in fact Mr. Zacaria did not read the notices.
Accordingly. I consider that the learned Judge erred in his conclusion on the first issue and I would hold that the IFF conditions were incorporated in this contract"
Again there are distinctions with the present case, and they are in the claimants' favour.
Conclusions