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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> McCutcheon v David MacBrayne Ltd [1964] UKHL 4 (21 January 1964)
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Cite as: [1964] WLR 165, [1964] 1 WLR 165, [1964] UKHL 4

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JISCBAILII_CASE_CONTRACT

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/4/3/1121

    Die Martis, 21° Januarii 1964

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee, to whom
    was referred the Cause McCutcheon against David
    MacBrayne Limited, that the Committee had heard
    Counsel as well on Monday the 2d, as on Tuesday the
    3d days of December last, upon the Petition and Appeal
    of Alexander McCutcheon (Assisted Person), residing
    at Laggan Farm, Bowmore, Islay, praying, That the
    matter of the Interlocutor set forth in the Schedule
    thereto, namely, an Interlocutor of the Lords of Session
    in Scotland, of the Second Division of the 7th of Novem-
    ber 1962, might be reviewed before Her Majesty the
    Queen, in Her Court of Parliament, and that the said
    Interlocutor might be reversed, varied or altered, or
    that the Petitioner might have such other relief in the
    premises as to Her Majesty the Queen, in Her Court
    of Parliament might seem meet; as also upon the Case
    of David MacBrayne Limited, lodged in answer to the
    said Appeal; and due consideration had this day of what
    was offered on either side in this Cause :

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual
    and Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty
    the Queen assembled, That the said Interlocutor of the
    7th day of November 1962, complained of in the said
    Appeal, be, and the same is hereby, Recalled, and that
    the Interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary of the 23d day of
    March 1962, thereby Recalled, be, and the same is
    hereby, Restored: And it is further Ordered, That the
    said Cause be, and the same is hereby, remitted back
    to the Court of Session in Scotland to proceed as
    accords: And it is further Ordered, That the Respon-
    dents do pay, or cause to be paid, to the said Appellant
    the Costs of the Action in the Inner House of the Court
    of Session and also the Costs incurred by him in respect
    of the said Appeal to this House, the amount of such
    last-mentioned Costs to be certified by the Clerk of
    the Parliaments: And it is also further Ordered, That
    unless the Costs, certified as aforesaid, shall be paid to
    the party entitled to the same within one calendar
    month from the date of the certificate thereof, the Court
    of Session in Scotland, or the Judge acting as Vacation
    Judge, shall issue such summary process or diligence for
    the recovery of such Costs as shall be lawful and
    necessary.

    McCutcheon v. David MacBrayne Limited.

    (J/31437) Wt. 80205--150 35 2/64 St.S./PA/20

    Lord Reid
    Lord Hodson
    Lord Guest
    Lord Devlin
    Lord Pearce

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    McCUTCHEON (A. P.)

    v
    DAVID MACBRAYNE LIMITED

    Lord Reid

    My Lords,

    The Appellant is a farm grieve in Islay. While on the mainland in
    October, 1960, he asked his brother-in-law, Mr. McSporran, a farmer in
    Islay, to have his car sent by the Respondents to West Loch Tarbert. Mr.
    McSporran took the car to Port Askaig. He found in the Respondents'
    office there the purser of their vessel " Lochiel ", who quoted the freight
    for a return journey for the car. He paid the money, obtained a receipt
    and delivered the car to the Respondents. It was shipped on the " Lochiel "
    but the vessel never reached West Loch Tarbert. She sank owing to
    negligent navigation by the Respondents' servants, and the car was a total
    loss. The Appellant sues for its value, agreed at £480.

    The question is, what was the contract between the parties? The contract
    was an oral one. No document was signed or changed hands until the
    contract was completed. I agree with the unanimous view of the learned
    judges of the Court of Session that the terms of the receipt which was made
    out by the purser and handed to Mr. McSporran after he paid the freight
    cannot be regarded as terms of the contract. So the case is not one of the
    familiar ticket cases where the question is whether conditions endorsed on
    or referred to in a ticket or other document handed to the consignor in
    making the contract are binding on the consignor. If conditions not men-
    tioned when this contract was made are to be added to or regarded as part
    of this contract it must be for some reason different from those principles
    which are now well settled in ticket cases. If this oral contract stands
    unqualified there can be no doubt that the Respondents are liable for the
    damage caused by the negligence of their servants.

    The Respondents' case is that their elaborate printed conditions form
    part of this contract. If they do, then admittedly they exclude liability in
    this case. I think I can fairly summarise the evidence on this matter. The
    Respondents exhibit copies of these conditions in their office, but neither
    the Appellant nor his agent Mr. McSporran had read these notices, and I
    agree that they can play no part in the decision of this case. Their practice
    was to require consignors to sign risk notes which included these con-
    ditions before accepting any goods for carriage, but on this occasion no
    risk note was signed. The Respondents' clerkess, knowing that Mr.
    McSporran was bringing the car for shipment, made out a risk note for his
    signature, but when he arrived she was not there and he dealt with the purser
    of the " Lochiel ", who was in the office. He asked for a return passage
    for the car. The purser quoted a charge of some £6. He paid that sum
    and then the purser made out and gave him a receipt which he put in his
    pocket without looking at it. He then delivered the car. The purser forgot
    to ask him to sign the risk note.

    The Lord Ordinary believed the evidence of Mr. McSporran and the
    Appellant. Mr. McSporran had consigned goods of various kinds on a num-
    ber of previous occasions. He said that sometimes he had signed a note,
    sometimes he had not. On one occasion he had sent his own car. A risk note
    for that consignment was produced signed by him. He had never read the
    risk notes signed by him. He says—" I sort of just signed it at the time
    " as a matter of form." He admitted that he knew he was signing in con-
    nection with some conditions but he did not know what they were. In
    particular, he did not know that he was agreeing to send the goods at
    owner's risk. The Appellant had consigned goods on four previous occa-
    sions. On three of them he was acting on behalf of his employer. On the
    other occasion he had sent his own car. Each time he had signed a risk

    2

    note. He also admitted that he knew there were conditions but said that he
    did not know what they were.

    The Respondents contend that, by reason of the knowledge thus gained
    by the Appellant and his agent in these previous transactions, the Appellant
    is bound by their conditions. But this case differs essentially from the
    ticket cases. There, the carrier in making the contract hands over a docu-
    ment containing or referring to conditions which he intends to be part of
    the contract. So if the consignor or passenger, when accepting the docu-
    ment, knows or ought as a reasonable man to know that that is the car-
    rier's intention, he can hardly deny that the conditions are part of the con-
    tract, or claim, in the absence of special circumstances, to be in a better
    position than he would be if he had read the document. But here, in
    making the contract neither party referred to, or indeed had in mind, any
    additional terms, and the contract was complete and fully effective without
    any additional terms. If it could be said that when making the contract
    Mr. McSporran knew that the Respondents always required a risk note to
    be signed and knew that the purser was simply forgetting to put it before
    him for signature, then it might be said that neither he nor his principal
    could take advantage of the error of the other party of which he was aware.
    But counsel frankly admitted that he could not put his case as high as
    that.

    The only other ground on which it would seem possible to import these
    conditions is that based on a course of dealing. If two parties have made
    a series of similar contracts each containing certain conditions, and then
    they make another without expressly referring to those conditions it may
    be that those conditions ought to be implied. If the officious bystander
    had asked them whether they had intended to leave out the conditions
    this time, both must, as honest men, have said " of course not ". But again
    the facts here will not support that ground. According to Mr. McSporran,
    there had been no consistent course of dealing ; sometimes he was asked to
    sign and sometimes not. And, moreover, he did not know what the con-
    ditions were. This time he was offered an oral contract without any refer-
    ence to conditions, and he accepted the offer in good faith.

    The Respondents also rely on the Appellant's previous knowledge. I
    doubt whether it is possible to spell out a course of dealing in his case.
    In all but one of the previous cases he had been acting on behalf of his
    employer in sending a different kind of goods and he did not know that
    the Respondents always sought to insist on excluding liability for their
    own negligence. So it cannot be said that when he asked his agent to make
    a contract for him he knew that this or, indeed, any other special term would
    be included in it. He left his agent a free hand to contract, and I see
    nothing to prevent him from taking advantage of the contract which his
    agent in fact made. " The judicial task is not to discover the actual inten-
    " tions of each party: it is to decide what each was reasonably entitled
    " to conclude from the attitude of the other " (Gloag, Contract p. 7). In this
    case I do not think that either party was reasonably bound or entitled
    to conclude from the attitude of the other as known to him that these con-
    ditions were intended by the other party to be part of this contract. I would
    therefore allow the appeal and restore the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary.

    Lord Hodson

    My Lords,

    The decision of the Second Division of the Inner House in favour of the
    Defenders seems to me to involve an extension of the application of the
    doctrine of " course of dealing " which is not warranted by the facts of this

    case.

    Assuming in favour of the Defenders that the experience of the Pursuer
    and his brother-in-law, who acted as his agent, would establish that on

    3

    previous occasions the Defenders' " risk note " embodying conditions
    absolving them from the consequences of negligence had been regularly
    signed, this does not establish that the legal situation was the same on the
    8th October, 1960, when the Pursuer's car was shipped by his brother-in-
    law on his behalf without the risk note being signed. No question of fraud,
    or mistake arises, and the only question is whether in some way the
    Defenders can establish their immunity by incorporating in the contract of
    carriage the conditions which were present on earlier transactions but
    absent on the relevant occasion.

    The course of dealing on earlier occasions is often relevant in determining
    contractual relations but does not assist when, as here, there was on the part
    of the Defenders a departure from an earlier course in that they omitted
    to ask the Pursuer's agent to sign the document by which they would have
    obtained protection.

    It the only question had been whether the Pursuer or his agent had
    notice of the conditions sought to be imposed, the observations of Baggallay
    L.J. in Parker v. South Eastern Railway Company (1877) 2 C.P.D. 416 at
    p. 425 would be material. That case, affirmed in Hood v. Anchor Line,
    1918 SC (HL) 143, established that the appropriate questions for the
    jury in a ticket case were: (1) Did the passenger know that there was print-
    ing on the railway ticket? (2) Did he know that the ticket contained or
    referred to conditions? and (3) Did the railway company do what was
    reasonable in the way of notifying prospective passengers of the existence
    of conditions and where their terms might be considered? It was in this
    connection that Baggallay L.J., after stating the liability of the company in
    the conduct of their cloakroom business as bailees for reward in the absence
    of a special contract constituted by the delivery and acceptance of a ticket
    or otherwise, proceeded to say—

    " The question then remains whether the plaintiffs were respectively
    '' aware, or ought to be treated as aware, of the intention of the com-
    " pany thus to modify the effect of the ordinary contract. Now as
    " regards each of the plaintiffs, if at the time when he accepted the
    " ticket, he, either by actual examination of it, or by reason of previous
    " experience, or from any other cause, was aware of the terms of
    " purport or effect of the endorsed conditions, it can hardly be doubted
    " that he became bound by them."

    These observations do not assist the Defenders. No effort was made to
    get the risk note signed, or otherwise to make the conditions therein con-
    tained a term of the contract of carriage. In short, the Defenders did not
    seek to impose any conditions. This is a vital distinction between this case
    and Parker's case, and a decision in favour of the Defenders would involve
    an extension and expansion of what was said by Baggallay L.J. which seems
    to me to be unsupported by authority and undesirable on principle.

    The law as it stands appears hard on the holders of tickets who, unless
    they are exceptional persons, will not take pains to make an examination
    of a ticket offered to them to see if any conditions are imposed. It would be
    scarcely tolerable to take the further step of treating a contracting party
    as if he had signed and so bound himself by the terms of a document with
    conditions embodied in it, when, as here, he has done no such thing but
    may be supposed, having regard to his previous experience, to have been
    willing to sign what was put before him if he had been asked.

    The Defenders seek to have the interlocutor appealed against affirmed
    on two other grounds both of which were rejected in the Scottish courts.
    First, they claim that the freight invoice, on which the receipt was placed
    acknowledging the payment of £6 5s. 0d., was a contract document contain-
    ing a sufficient reference to the conditions and was accepted by the Pursuer's
    agent on his behalf and the Pursuer was therefore bound by them. In the
    second place, they claim that by posting four copies of the conditions on
    the Port Askaig Pier and three copies on board their vessel " Lochiel" they
    took sufficient steps to give notice of the conditions so as to bind the Pursuer.
    The receipt was handed over, as the Lord Justice-Clerk pointed out, after

    4

    the contract was completed and cannot be treated as an offer. It played
    no part in the formation of the contract and there was no reason to suppose
    that it referred to conditions.

    On both these grounds I agree with the learned judges in the Scottish
    courts that the Defenders failed to show that they did what was reasonably
    sufficient to bring to the notice of the Pursuer or his agent the conditions
    upon which they found.

    I would allow the appeal.

    Lord Guest

    My Lords,

    This appeal raises a novel point in regard to the exemptions which can
    be claimed from a carrier's liability, namely: Whether in the absence of
    any contractual document a consignor of goods can by a course of previous
    dealing be bound by conditions of which he is generally aware but the
    specific terms of which he has no knowledge? The judgment of the Second
    Division appears to be based on this statement of the law by the Lord
    Justice-Clerk, 1962 S.C 512:

    " It is, I think, well settled that, if A contracts with B for the
    " carriage by B of A's goods, in the knowledge, gained through previous
    " experience of similar transactions, that B carries goods subject to
    " conditions, A is bound by these conditions under this later contract,
    " if it is of a similar nature to those which have gone before, in the
    " absence of agreement or information to the contrary. This applies
    " even if A, knowing that there are conditions, does not take the
    " trouble to ascertain precisely what these conditions are. If, however,
    " the later transaction is carried out in different circumstances, and
    " because of that difference A believes that the conditions attached to
    " the earlier transactions are not intended to apply, then the conditions
    " will not, merely because of A's previous knowledge, be held to be
    " binding upon him. In each case the question of the extent of A's
    " knowledge is a question of fact."

    Although the Lord Justice-Clerk quotes no authority for these propositions
    it is, I think, apparent from the observations of Lord Mackintosh (1962
    S.C., 516) to the same effect which are said to result from the judgment
    of Baggallay L.J. in Parker v. South Eastern Railway Co. (1877) 2 C.P.D.
    416 that the Lord Justice-Clerk was relying on Parker's case. In my
    view Parker, which has been accepted as the standard authority on what
    are known as " ticket condition " cases, (see Hood v. Anchor Line 1918
    S.C. (H.L.) 143) was a different case. The observations of Baggallay, L.J.
    at p. 425 relied on were made with reference to the ticket cases. In a
    ticket case the offer is made by the company to carry the passenger or
    goods on the conditions referred to on the ticket and the passenger or
    consignor by purchasing the ticket accepts the offer with the conditions
    thereon incorporated. The ticket thus becomes a contractual document
    containing the conditions, and the passenger is bound by the conditions.
    It is, in my view, not legitimate to apply the tests of incorporation of
    conditions in such cases to a case like the present where there is no
    contractual document. In the present case it is incorrect to assume that the
    offer of carriage is made by the Respondents on what are described as
    " Standard Conditions ". The verbal contract is made by the consignor
    tendering the goods and by the carrier accepting them. A simple contract
    of carriage is thereby created. In this situation the Respondents, upon
    whom lies the onus to escape liability, would have to show that exempting
    conditions have been incorporated into the contract. They cannot do this
    merely by evidence of a previous course of conduct. All that the previous
    dealings in the present case can show is that the Appellant and his agent
    knew that the previous practice of the Respondents was to impose special
    conditions. But knowledge on their part did not and could not by itself

    5

    import acceptance by them of these conditions, the exact terms of which
    they were unaware, into a contract which was different in character from
    those in the previous course of dealing. The practice of the Respondents
    was to insist on a written contract incorporated in the Risk Note. On
    the occasion in question a verbal contract was made without reference to
    the conditions.

    No case was referred to by the Respondents in which it has been held
    that a carrier in circumstances such as the present was entitled to avoid
    liability, and their counsel was constrained to admit that the decision of
    the Second Division would be a novel departure. It would, in my view,
    be undesirable to extend the doctrine of the applicability of conditions
    any further than at present I agree with the Lord Ordinary that it is
    impossible to hold that McSporran as agent for the Appellant agreed to
    any conditions. I would allow the appeal.

    Lord Devlin

    My Lords,

    When a person in the Isle of Islay wishes to send goods to the mainland
    he goes into the office of MacBrayne (the Respondents) in Port Askaig
    which is conveniently combined with the local Post Office. There he is
    presented with a document headed " Conditions " containing three or four
    thousand words of small print divided into twenty-seven paragraphs. Beneath
    them there is a space for the sender's signature which he puts below his
    Statement in quite legible print that he thereby agrees to ship on the
    conditions stated above. The Appellant, Mr. McCutcheon, described the
    negotiations which preceded the making of this formidable contract in the
    following terms: -

    " Q. Tell us about that document; how did you come to sign it?

    " A. You just walk in the office and the document is filled up ready
    " and all you have to do is to sign your name and go out.

    " Q. Did you ever read the conditions?

    " A. No

    " Q. Did you know what was in them?

    " A. No."

    There are many other passages in which Mr. McCutcheon and his
    brother-in-law, Mr. McSporran, endeavour more or less successfully to
    appease the forensic astonishment aroused by this statement. People
    shipping calves, Mr. McCutcheon said, (he was dealing with an occasion
    when he had shipped 36 calves) had not much time to give to the reading.
    Asked to deal with another occasion when he was unhampered by livestock,
    he said that people generally just tried to be in time for the boat's sailing;
    it would, he thought, take half a day to read and understand the conditions
    and then he would miss the boat. In another part of his evidence he went
    so far as to say that if everybody took time to read the document,
    " MacBrayne's office would be packed out the door ". Mr. McSporran
    evidently thought the whole matter rather academic because, as he pointed
    out, there was no other way to send a car.

    There came a day, 8th October, I960, when one of the Respondents'
    vessels was negligently sailed into a rock and sank. She had on board a
    car belonging to Mr. McCutcheon which he had got Mr. McSporran to
    ship for him, and the car was a total loss. It would be a strangely generous
    set of conditions in which the persistent reader, after wading through the
    verbiage, could not find something to protect the carrier against " any
    " loss . . . wheresoever or whensoever occurring "; and Condition 19
    by itself is enough to absolve the Respondents several times over for all

    6

    their negligence. It is conceded that if the form had been signed as usual
    the Appellant would have had no case. But by a stroke of ill luck for the
    Respondents it was upon this day of all days that they omitted to get
    Mr. McSporran to sign the conditions. What difference does that make?

    If it were possible for your Lordships to escape from the world of make
    believe which the law has created into the real world in which transactions
    of this sort are actually done, the answer would be short and simple. It
    should make no difference whatever. This sort of document is not meant
    to be read, still less to be understood. Its signature is in truth about as
    significant as a handshake that marks the formal conclusion of a bargain.

    Your Lordships were referred to the dictum of Blackburn, J. in Harris v.
    Great Western Railway Company (1876) 1 Q.B.D. 515, at 530. The passage
    is as follows:-

    " And it is clear law that where there is a writing, into which the
    " terms of any agreement are reduced, the terms are to be regulated
    " by that writing. And though one of the parties may not have read
    " the writing, yet, in general, he is bound to the other by those terms;
    " and that, I apprehend, is on the ground that, by assenting to the
    " contract thus reduced to writing, he represents to the other side that
    " he has made himself acquainted with the contents of that writing and
    " assents to them, and so induces the other side to act upon that
    " representation by entering into the contract with him, and is conse-
    " quently precluded from denying that he did make himself acquainted
    " with those terms. But then the preclusion only exists when the case is
    " brought within the rule so carefully and accurately laid down by
    " Parke, B., in delivering the judgment of the Exchequer in Freeman v.
    " Cooke, that is, if he ' means his representation to be acted upon, and
    " ' it is acted upon accordingly: or if, whatever a man's real intentions
    " may be, he so conduct himself that a reasonable man would take
    " ' the representation to be true, and believe that it was meant that he
    " ' should act upon it, and did act upon it as true' ".

    If the ordinary law of estoppel was applicable to this case, it might well
    be argued that the circumstances leave no room for any representation by
    the sender on which the carrier acted. I believe that any other member
    of the public in Mr. McCutcheon's place,—and this goes for lawyers as
    well as for laymen,—would have found himself compelled to give the same
    sort of answers as Mr. McCutcheon gave ; and I doubt if any carrier who
    serves out documents of this type could honestly say that he acted in the
    belief that the recipient had " made himself acquainted with the contents ".
    But Blackburn, J. was dealing with an unsigned document, a cloakroom
    ticket. Unless your Lordships are to disapprove the decision of the Court
    of Appeal in L'Estrange v. Graucob [1934] 2 K.B. 394,—and there has
    been no suggestion in this case that you should,—the law is clear, without
    any recourse to the doctrine of estoppel, that a signature to a contract is

    conclusive.

    This is a matter that is relevant to the way in which the Respondents
    put their case. They say that the previous dealings between themselves
    and the Appellant, being always on the terms of their " risk note ", as they
    call their written conditions, the contract between themselves and the
    Appellant must be deemed to import the same conditions. In my opinion,
    the bare fact that there have been previous dealings between the parties
    does not assist the Respondents at all. The fact that a man has made a
    contract in the same form ninety-nine times (let alone three or four times
    which are here alleged) will not of itself affect the hundredth contract in
    which the form is not used. Previous dealings are relevant only if they
    prove knowledge of the terms, actual and not constructive, and assent to
    them. If a term is not expressed in a contract, there is only one other way
    in which it can come into it and that is by implication. No implication can
    be made against a party of a term which was unknown to him. If previous
    dealings show that a man knew of and agreed to a term on ninety-nine

    7

    occasions, there is a basis for saying that it can be imported into the
    hundredth contract without an express statement. It may or may not be
    sufficient to justify the importation,—that depends on the circumstances;
    but at least by proving knowledge the essential beginning is made. Without
    knowledge there is nothing.

    It is for the purpose of proving knowledge that the Respondents rely
    on the dictum of Blackburn, J. which I have cited. My Lords, in spite of
    the great authority of Blackburn, J., I think that this a dictum which
    some day your Lordships may have to examine more closely. It seems
    to me that when a party assents to a document forming the whole or a
    part of his contract, he is bound by the terms of the document, read or
    unread, signed or unsigned, simply because they are in the contract; and
    it is unnecessary and possibly misleading to say that he is bound by them
    because he represents to the other party that he has made himself acquainted
    with them. But if there be an estoppel of this sort, its effect is in my opinion
    limited to the contract in relation to which the representation is made; and
    it cannot (unless of course there be something else on which the estoppel
    is founded besides the mere receipt of the document) assist the other party
    in relation to other transactions. The Respondents in the present case
    have quite failed to prove that the Appellant made himself acquainted with
    the conditions they had introduced into previous dealings. He is not
    estopped from saying that for good reasons or bad he signed the previous
    contracts without the slightest idea of what was in them. If that is so,
    previous dealings are no evidence of knowledge and so are of little or no
    use to the Respondents in this case.

    I say " of little or no use " because the Appellant did admit that he knew
    that there were some conditions though he did not know what they were.
    He certainly did not know that they were conditions which exempted the
    Respondents from liability for their own negligence, though I suppose, if
    he had thought about them at all, he would have known that they probably
    exempted the Respondents from the strict liability of a carrier. Most people
    know that carriers exact some conditions and it does not matter in this
    case whether Mr. McCutcheon's knowledge was general knowledge of this
    sort or was derived from previous dealings. Your Lordships can therefore
    leave previous dealings out of it and ask yourselves simply what is the
    position of a man who, with that amount of general knowledge, apparently
    makes a contract into which no conditions are expressly inserted?

    The answer must surely be that either he does not make a contract at all
    because the parties are not ad idem or he makes the contract without the
    conditions. You cannot have a contract subject to uncommunicated con-
    ditions the terms of which are known only to one side.

    It is at this point, I think, that their Lordships in the Second Division
    fell into error. The Lord Justice-Clark said: " It is, I think, well settled
    " that, if A contracts with B for the carriage by B of A's goods, in the
    " knowledge, gained through previous experience of similar transactions,
    " that B carries goods subject to conditions. A is bound by these conditions
    " under this later contract, if it is of a similar nature to those which have
    " gone before, in the absence of agreement or information to the contrary,
    " This applies even if A, knowing that there are conditions, does not take the
    " trouble to ascertain precisely what these conditions are ". Similarly Lord
    MacIntosh said: " In these circumstances, I am of the opinion, following
    " what I understand to be the law as laid down in Parker v. South Eastern
    " Railway Company (1877) 2 C.P.D. 416, and particularly by Baggallay,
    " L.J. at 425, that the pursuer, being aware by reason of his own previous
    " experience, and of that of the agent who happened to be acting for him
    " in the present transaction, that goods were carried on the defender's vessels
    " subject to certain conditions, and having been given no reason to think
    " that these conditions were not still operative on 8th October, 1960, was
    " bound by the conditions, although, as was proved to have been the case.
    ' he had never at any time acquainted himself with their purport ".

    8

    My Lords, I think, with great respect, that this is to introduce a new
    and fundamentally erroneous principle into the law of contract. There
    can be no conditions in any contract unless they are brought into it by
    expression, incorporation or implication. They are not brought into it
    simply because one party has inserted them into similar transactions in the
    past and has not given the other party any reason to think that he will
    not want to insert them again. The error is based, I think, on a misunder-
    standing of what are commonly called the ticket cases ; I say this because the
    single authority cited for the proposition is one of the leading ticket cases,
    Parker v. South Eastern Railway Company. The question in these cases
    is whether or not the passenger has accepted the ticket as a contractual
    document. If he knows that it contains conditions of some sort, he must
    know that it is meant to be contractual. If he accepts it as a contractual
    document, then prima facie (I am not dealing with questions of reasonable
    notice) he is bound by the conditions that are printed on it or incorporated
    in it by sufficient reference to some other document, whether he has inquired
    about them or not. That is all that Baggallay, L.J. is saying in Parker v.
    South Eastern Railway.

    In the present case there is no contractual document at all. There is not
    so much as a peg on which to hang any terms that are not expressed in the
    contract nor a phrase which is capable of expansion. It is as if the Appellant
    had been accepted as a passenger without being given a ticket at all. There
    is then no special contract and the contract is the ordinary one which the
    law imposes on carriers. As Baggallay, L.J. said at 424, " This clearly
    " would be the nature of the contract if no ticket were delivered, as occasion-
    " ally happens ".

    If a man is given a blank ticket without conditions or any reference to
    them, even if he knows in detail what the conditions usually exacted are, he
    is not, in the absence of any allegation of fraud or of that sort of mistake
    for which the law gives relief, bound by such conditions. It may seem a
    narrow and artificial line that divides a ticket that is blank on the back from
    one that says " For conditions see time-tables ", or something of that sort,
    that has been held to be enough notice. I agree that it is an artificial line
    and one that has little relevance to every day conditions. It may be beyond
    your Lordships' power to make the artificial line more natural: but at least
    you can see that it is drawn fairly for both sides and that there is not one
    law for individuals and another for organisations that can issue printed
    documents. If the Respondents had remembered to issue a risk note in this
    case, they would have invited your Lordships to give a curt answer to any
    complaint by the Appellant. He might say that the terms were unfair and
    unreasonable, that he had never voluntarily agreed to them, that it was
    impossible to read or understand them and that anyway if he had tried to
    negotiate any change the Respondents would not have listened to him. The
    Respondents would expect him to be told that he had made his contract
    and must abide by it. Now the boot is on the other foot. It is just as
    legitimate, but also just as vain, for the Respondents to say that it was
    only a slip on their part, that it is unfair and unreasonable of the Appellant
    to take advantage of it and that he knew perfectly well that they never
    carried goods except on conditions. The law must give the same answer:
    they must abide by the contract they made. What is sauce for the goose
    is sauce for the gander. It will remain unpalatable sauce for both animals
    until the legislature, if the courts cannot do it, intervenes to secure that
    when contracts are made in circumstances in which there is no scope for free
    negotiation of the terms, they are made upon terms that are clear, fair and
    reasonable and settled independently as such. That is what Parliament has
    done in the case of carriage of goods by rail and on the high seas.

    I have now given my opinion on the main point in the case and the one
    on which the Respondents succeeded below. On the other points on which
    the Respondents failed below and which they put forward again as grounds
    for dismissing the claim, I have nothing to add to what your Lordships have
    already said. In my opinion the appeal should be allowed.

    9
    Lord Pearce

    My Lords,

    At common law the Defenders had a duty of care to the Pursuer and a
    liability for negligence, unless by some special contract they have excluded
    that duty or liability. Usually such a special contract is achieved by the
    carrier producing a written contract which the customer signs, or by the
    carrier printing and displaying regulations to which reference is made on
    the ticket which the customer buys. In such a case the customer is bound
    by the conditions embodied in the written contract, or in the printed con-
    ditions to which the ticket refers, even if he does not read them and does not
    know their import, always provided that the carrier shews that he has taken
    reasonable steps to bring the conditions to the customer's notice (Parker v.
    South Eastern Railway Co. 2 C.P.D. 416; Hood v. Anchor Line 1918 S.C.
    (H.L.) 143 per Lord Dunedin at 148). In the present case, however, there
    was no written contract or ticket. Therefore, the foundation on which the
    ticket cases rests is absent.

    A special contract may also be made orally in express terms which set
    out the exclusion of liability or incorporate by reference conditions that do
    so. But no such express oral contract is suggested here.

    It follows that the Defenders must seek to rely on some implied special
    contract. In this they are hampered by the fact that the common law
    already implies a contract between carrier and customer (in default of other
    agreement) to the effect that a carrier will be entitled to a reasonable reward
    and that he must carry the goods with care and will be liable for negligence.
    No special contract can be inferred from the basic facts that the Pursuer's
    agent handed over the car for carriage and paid to the Defenders a sum for
    the freight. For the normal inference is that an ordinary common law
    contract for carriage of goods was intended. What other facts, then, can
    the Defenders adduce which will shew that the normal inference is erroneous
    and that in truth a special contract should be implied?

    The Defenders rely on the course of dealing. But they are seeking to
    establish an oral contract by a course of dealing which always insisted on
    a written contract. It is the consistency of a course of conduct which gives
    rise to the implication that in similar circumstances a similar contractual
    result will follow. When the conduct is not consistent, there is no reason why
    it should still produce an invariable contractual result. The Defenders
    having previously offered a written contract, on this occasion offered an oral
    one. The Pursuer's agent duly paid the freight for which he was asked and
    accepted the oral contract thus offered. This raises no implication that the
    conditions of the oral contract must be the same as the conditions of the
    written contract would have been had the Defenders proferred one.

    Recourse is then sought to knowledge and intention. This is not a case
    where there was any bad faith on the part of the Pursuer or his agent. Had
    the Pursuer's agent snatched at an offer that he knew was not intended, or
    deliberately taken advantage of the Defenders' omission to proffer their
    usual printed form for his signature, the situation would be different and
    other considerations would apply. But neither the Pursuer nor his agent
    gave any thought to conditions. Nor had they any knowledge that clause 11
    would contain, wrapped in thirty lines of small print and in language in-
    telligible only to a lawyer or a person of education and perspicacity, a total
    exclusion of liability for almost every conceivable act of the Defenders that
    might damage the Pursuer's goods.

    The Defenders never intended to offer or make any oral contract on the
    terms of the printed conditions. They intended to offer a written contract
    and by mistake they offered an oral one. The Pursuer was unaware of the
    mistake. He accepted an oral contract but he never intended to accept an
    oral contract on the printed conditions. He knew that he usually had to

    10

    sign a form which he supposed contained some conditions. When he was
    offered an oral contract without conditions he accepted with no thought
    about its terms. Why should such intentions or knowledge on the part of
    the contracting parties lead the Court to create a contract which neither
    intended? The furthest to which this argument of the Defenders could lead
    is to the conclusion that the parties were never ad idem ; in which case there
    was no special contract and the common law contract prevails.

    Some reliance was placed on the fact that the Pursuer and his agent were
    in no wise misled nor suffered from the absence of the written form since
    they would not have read it or paid any attention to it in any event. This
    argument has a cynical flavour. It really amounts to saying that because
    the Pursuer would have been bound by a harsh condition, of which he did
    not know, if the Defenders had taken the proper legal steps, he should be
    likewise bound when they neglected to take those steps. The law inflicts
    some hardship on ignorant or careless plaintiffs who accept a ticket or sign
    a printed form in that it holds them bound by printed conditions which they
    have not read and of which they know nothing. The reasons for this are
    given in Parker v. South Eastern Railway Company (above). If the De-
    fenders are to have the benefit of the reasoning in Parker's case they must
    take the necessary steps. To decide in the Defenders' favour on the facts
    of this case would be a further extension of the protection afforded to de-
    fendants by the ticket cases. Such an extension seems to me very undesirable.

    With all respects to the contrary view of the Inner House, I agree with the
    reasoning and conclusions of the learned Lord Ordinary. I would there-
    fore allow the appeal.

    (P/31326) Wt. 8024—149 50 l/64 St.S.


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