CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)
Commercial Court

CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)

Fecha: 17-Jul-2025

The last edition of Chalmers is the 18 th Ed. (1981). The footnote citing Dunlop v Grote remains (p.222); and the paragraph quoted above is retained as a statement of the “ History ” of s.49 (p.223)

B3.

The last edition of Chalmers is the 18th Ed. (1981). The footnote citing Dunlop v Grote remains (p.222); and the paragraph quoted above is retained as a statement of the “History” of s.49 (p.223). The “Comment” section thereafter includes the following:

(i)

(on p.224): “Where the property in the goods has passed.–The seller frequently insists that property in the goods is to pass only when he is paid. It has been suggested that this is a provision which the seller may in some circumstances be entitled to waive, it being for his benefit alone, thereby causing the property to pass to the buyer, so as to entitle him to sue for the price (f). This may assist him where the price is otherwise payable on delivery and the buyer refuses to take delivery. But in other circumstances, if the price is due, the seller may be entitled to claim it in any event at common law, apart from the provisions of sub-s. (2) of this section (g), and if the price is paid the property will then pass under the terms of the contract.

(f)

Napier v Dexters, Ltd. (1926), 26 Ll. L. Rep. at pp. 63-64, per Roche, J., and on appeal at pp. 187-188, per Bankes, L.J.; Martin v Hogan (1917), 24 C.L.R. 231 (H.C. of Aus.).

(g)

See post, “On a day certain irrespective of delivery”.

(ii)

(on pp.224-225): “On a day certain irrespective of delivery.–In order to succeed in a claim under sub-s. (2) it is necessary to prove that the price payable on a day certain irrespective of delivery. “Day certain” has been held to mean a time specified in the contract not depending on a future or contingent event (i), and it has frequently been held that where payment is against shipping documents it is not on a day certain irrespective of delivery, so that no action for the price may be maintained (k).

(i)

Merchant Shipping Co. v Armitage (1873), L.R. 9 Q.B. 99; Shell Mex, Ltd. v Elton Cop. Dyeing Co. (1928), 34 Com. Cas. 38; Muller Maclean & Co. v Lesley and Anderson, [1921] W. N. 235. But in Workman Clark & Co. v Lloyd Brazileno, [1908] 1 K.B. 968, the Court of Appeal all considered that s. 49(2) applied in a case where an instalment of the price was payable when the keel of a ship was laid. The judgments as reported refer only to s.49, but it is clear from the terms of the contract, under which the property had not passed, and from the argument of counsel that only s. 49(2) could apply. See also Colley v Overseas Exporters [1921] 3 K.B. 302, 306.

(k)

Muller Maclean & Co. v Lesley and Anderson, supra; Stein Forbes & Co v County Tailoring Co. (1916), 115 L.T. 215. But cf Polenghi v Dried Milk Co., Ltd. (1904), 10 Com. Cas. 42.

But if this construction is correct, it would seem that this section does not cover all the situations in which an action for the price might have been maintained at common law where the property in the goods have not passed. In Workman Clark & Co v Lloyd Brazileno (l), the Court of Appeal held that a seller was entitled at common law to summary judgment for an instalment of the price of a ship which under the terms of the contract was payable “when the keel … is laid”. In principle there seems no reason why the rules of common law should be excluded by this section, and there is some authority that where a contract clearly provides for the unconditional (m) payment of the price in given circumstances which arise, then the seller may claim the price (n). Thus, if the buyer has accepted delivery and not rejected the goods, payment being 90 days after delivery, and there being a provision that property should not pass until payment, the seller cannot claim damages for non-acceptance for the buyer has accepted the goods, and there seems no good reason why he should not claim the price.

(l)

[1908] 1 K.B. 968, C.A. In Colley v Overseas Exporters, [1921] 3 K.B. 302, at pp. 309-310, McCardie, J., says that no action will lie for the price of the goods until the property has passed except under the rule now embodied in s. 49(2). But at p. 306, he clearly interprets the Workman Clark case, as coming within sub-s. (2).

(m)

Payment “on delivery” or “against documents” is not unconditional in this sense.

(n)

Minister of Supply and Development v Servicemen’s Co-operative Joinery Manufacturers, Ltd. (1951), 82 C.L.R. 621 (H.C. of Aus.) (“net cash before delivery”). See also McEntire v Crossley Brothers, [1895] A.C. 497, , per Lord Halsbury; Sandford v Dairy Supplies, Ltd., [1941] N.Z.L.R. 141. Polenghi Dried Milk Co., Ltd. (1904), 10 Com. Cas. 42 (payment on arrival of ship against documents) also supports this proposition, but the case is inconsistent with Stein Forbes & Co. v County Tailoring Co. (1916), 115 L.T. 215, where Atkin,J., construed a similar provision as meaning payment upon delivery.