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

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

Fecha: 17-Jul-2025

There were two grounds for the Court of Appeal’s decision ( per Potter LJ at [14]-[16])

B46.

There were two grounds for the Court of Appeal’s decision (per Potter LJ at [14]-[16]):

(i)

firstly, the repurchase arrangement was a contract for the sale of goods that did not contain any provision negativing the normal rule that payment was to be made against, and in consideration for, delivery, so the trial judge had erred in deciding that s.49(2) of the Act applied;

(ii)

secondly, if s.49(2) had applied, nonetheless any entitlement to maintain an action for the price under it depended upon the seller’s continuing willingness and ability to deliver the goods to the buyer (see Maclean v Dunn and Watkins (1828) 6 LJ (O.S.) CP 184, and Benjamin at 16-001), but prior to trial the claimant had disposed of the vehicles and put it out of its power to tender them against payment of the buy-back price. (When Otis Vehicle Rentals was decided, Benjamin was in its 5th Ed.; the statement of principle still appears in the 12th Ed., 16-001 at n.9.)

B47.

The first ground did not require the Court of Appeal to consider the meaning of s.49(2) in any detail or to decide anything about it pertinent to the present case. The second ground might perhaps have provided the buyer in the present case with a defence, depending on what happened to the goods for which it did not pay. However, there is no hint in the Awards that the buyer raised any such defence before the Board of Appeal, and the Awards made no findings about what happened to the goods beyond the ‘negative’ finding that the seller had not proved its allegation that the goods had been taken dishonestly by the buyer using fraudulent documents.