Pearson v Wynn
Pearson v Wynn | |
---|---|
Court | High Court of New Zealand |
Full case name | Pearson v Wynn |
Decided | 6 May 1986 |
Citation | (1986) 2 NZCPR 449 |
Court membership | |
Judge sitting | Wlliamson J |
Pearson v Wynn (1986) 2 NZCPR 449 is a cited case in New Zealand regarding the requirement under section 7(4)(b) of the Contractual Remedies Act 1970 that a breach of contract must be "substantial" for a contract to be cancelled.[1]
Background
[edit]Pearson sold to Wynn his horticultural land for $159,000.
Prior to the sale, Pearson had misrepresented that the land was fully irrigated, when in fact that the irrigation system need a further $9,500 to $10,000 spent on it.
When this came to the notice of Wynn, he cancelled the contract.
Pearson sued to have the contract honoured.
Held
[edit]The court held that whilst the $9,500 - $10,000 in costs were not substantial in itself, that the inconvenience of the work that was entailed, met the standard required under either s 7 (4)(b)(I) or s7(4)(b)(ii). Williamson J stated "Matters in relation to this term not necessarily relate only to value or money, but may also involve features which confer a benefit or cast a burden of some substantive on a party".
References
[edit]- ^ Chetwin, Maree; Graw, Stephen; Tiong, Raymond (2006). An introduction to the Law of Contract in New Zealand (4th ed.). Thomson Brookers. p. 354. ISBN 0-86472-555-8.