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Chandler v Webster

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1904 English contract law case

Chandler v Webster
CourtCourt of Appeal
Citation 1 KB 493
Court membership
Judges sittingLord Collins MR, Romer LJ and Mathew LJ
Keywords
Frustration

Chandler v Webster , 1 KB 493 is an English contract law case concerning frustration. It is one of several coronation cases which appeared in the courts after King Edward VII fell ill and his coronation was postponed.

Facts

Mr Webster agreed to let Mr Chandler a room on Pall Mall to watch the king's coronation on 26 June 1902 for £141 15s (equivalent to £19,300 in 2023). It was understood between the parties that the money for the room should be paid before the procession. Mr Chandler hired the room with the intention of erecting a stand and selling tickets.

On 10 June Mr Chandler wrote to Mr Webster saying:

I beg to confirm my purchase of the first-floor room of the Electric Lighting Board at 7, Pall Mall, to view the procession on Thursday, June 26, for the sum of £141, 15s., which amount is now due. I shall be obliged if you will take the room on sale, and I authorize you to sell separate seats in the room, for which I will erect a stand. If the seats thus sold in the ordinary way of business do not realize the above amount by June 26, I agree to pay you the balance to make up such amount of £141, 15s.

Mr Chandler paid £100 on 19 June but then the king fell ill. The question was whether the £100 could be recovered by Mr Chandler, or whether Mr Webster could demand the balance.

Judgment

High Court

Wright J held that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the £100 which he had paid, and that, on the construction of the letter of 10 June, it appeared that the balance was not payable until after the procession, and consequently the defendant was not entitled to recover on the counter-claim.

Court of Appeal

Lord Collins MR, Romer LJ and Mathew LJ held that Mr Chandler was not entitled to recover his damages before the procession became impossible.

Reform

The Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 provided, among other things, that monies provided in advance of performance of a contract are recoverable in the event of performance being frustrated.

See also

Sources for impossibility
Paradine v Jane EWHC KB J5
Courturier v Hastie UKHL J3
Taylor v Caldwell EWHC QB J1
Krell v Henry 2 KB 740
Bell v Lever Brothers Ltd UKHL 2
Maritime Fish Ltd v Ocean Trawlers Ltd UKPC 1
Fibrosa Spolka v Fairbairn Lawson Ltd UKHL 4
Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 (c 40)
Fraser & Co v Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd UKHL 3
Solle v Butcher 1 KB 671
McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission [1951] HCA 79
Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC UKHL 3
John Walker & Sons Ltd 1 WLR 164
National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd UKHL 8
BP Exploration Co (Libya) v Hunt (No 2) 2 AC 352
The Superservant Two EWCA Civ 6
Gamerco SA v ICM Fair Warning Ltd EWHC QB 1
The Great Peace EWCA Civ 1407
See common mistake and frustration in English law
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