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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Payless Travel Ltd v Baba Krupa Holidays [2004] EWCA Civ 472 (26 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/472.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 472 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
(MISS RECORDER MACUR QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
____________________
PAYLESS TRAVEL LTD | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
BABA KRUPA HOLIDAYS | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R C D REES (instructed by P M Suchak & Co Solicitors, Leicester LE4 6QR) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Friday, 26 March 2004
"In a contract for the supply of a service where the supplier is acting in the course of a business there is an implied term that the supplier will carry out the service with reasonable care and skill."
That was the contractual duty which was concerned in this case.
"Subj: 20 pas group booking 09-17 March 2002
Dear Mrs Mavji
Further to our telephone conversation yesterday 28th February 2002, please be informed that we are now cancelling the above group of 20 seats as its time limit has run out and no passenger names have so far been submitted.
Further to the above, I would like to inform you that by holding allocations on our flights for groups supposedly to be sold by Payless Travel and their subagents does not produce the required revenue, quite the opposite - we are turning away other clients and therefore suffering losses.
The above practice contradicts your statement at our meeting on 25th of February 02 that Payless Travel supports Balkan with 'year round' sales.
I have been directed by our Head Office to cancel all existing Payless Travel (and those of their subagents) as of 23rd of March 2002. This gives you enough time to make alternative bookings on your own system based on 'free sale' of the available seats or offer your clients alternative arrangements. Please contact me if further information is required."
It may be that in that dispute which had arisen between Balkan and Payless Travel Balkan, who wrote that letter under the name of their manager, Mr Georgi Avgarsky, had failed to appreciate that within the last few days they had received the passenger names in respect of the flight of 23 March 2002, which is the subject matter of these proceedings. All that, however, is rather lost and mysterious in the background to this litigation, and because Balkan became insolvent and were never party to this litigation, was never properly investigated or elucidated at trial. Be that as it may, it came to be the case of Payless Travel that following the receipt of that letter Mrs Mavji had spoken on the telephone to Mr Avgarsky on the next day, 7 March, and in the course of that conversation had received from Mr Avgarsky an oral assurance that the flight of 23 March was on and that the cancellation as of 23 March (referred to in that letter) was off. Whether, however, such a conversation had taken place with that result was in issue at the trial below.
"I was therefore amazed that my legal representatives were recently shown a list which, they were told, was provided to the 23 March 2002 passengers at the check in counter. Assuming the list is what Baba Krupa's Solicitors understand it to be, the Baba Krupa passenger names were not on that list. Frankly, I have no idea why. What I can say is that we did everything in our power to ensure that this booking was properly made, and we followed precisely the same procedure we had used for the successful bookings which took place both in the week preceding 23rd March 2002 and in the following week."
"2/3/02 Spoke to George and said that the group tickets are already issued and given to agents for 23/3/02."
"I am afraid that I do not accept that evidence as being accurate, or indeed credible. I regard it to be strange that such evidence, if it did exist before the filing of her statement, did not find its way into either of the statements that Mrs [Mavji] has filed in these proceedings. Indeed, it is a matter of note that the letter that came into the possession of Baba Krupa Travel had been faxed by, or on behalf of, Balkan Bulgarian Airlines. This had not previously been disclosed in the summary proceedings which preceded this claim, or it seems in these present proceedings. I received today a copy of the fax with the manuscript note of Mrs [Mavji] through Mr Kirk."
"I am somewhat perplexed to understand how the annotated letter is representative, as Mrs [Mavji] says it is, of the agreement she said she reached with George [Avgarsky]. In fact I take the point made by Mr [Rees] in his cross-examination of Mrs [Mavji] that that annotation does not record what she said was an agreement made between them. It seems clear to me that any reasonable operator in these circumstances, if they had had such a conversation and received such an assurance, would have required that information to be provided in writing, not least because the cancellation itself was in writing."
"20. It [Payless Travel] significantly fell down from the reasonable care and skill that was implicit in the contract and I find as a fact that the reason that 34 passengers did not travel on 23 March 2002 was, on the balance of probabilities due to the fact that their ticket, once issued, had been cancelled. 21. Since this cancellation had been known to Mrs [Mavji], then she was under a clear duty, as required by the implicit terms of the contract, to make amends either by alerting Baba Krupa Holidays to the situation, or else by seeking assurance in cast iron form from Balkan Bulgarian Airlines."
She then turned to the schedule of damages and dealt with the various heads of claim, not all in favour of Baba Krupa.
"Discerning a lack of care in one element of the booking process, the learned Judge felt able to conclude that [Payless Travel] was in breach of its obligations to [Baba Krupa]. She was, of course, entitled to find that [Payless Travel] did not do as it ought to have done in respect of seeking reassurance that the booking would not be cancelled, and that this constituted a breach. [Payless Travel] accepts the finding of fact, that no 'cast iron' written confirmation was sought, though not that this necessarily constitutes a breach. The basis of the appeal, however, is that of legal causation."
"The brokers were, I think, under a duty of care to look after Mr Ellis' interests."
That is something that Payless Travel had failed to do in this case for the reasons given by the recorder.
(Appeal dismissed; appellant will pay the costs of the appeal, such costs to be the subject of a detailed assessment).