Pillans v Van Mierop
Pillans v Van Mierop & Hopkins | |
---|---|
Court | King's Bench |
Full case name | Pillans & Rose v Van Mierop & Hopkins |
Citation(s) | (1765) 3 Burr 1663, 97 ER 1035 |
Case opinions | |
Lord Mansfield, Wilmot J, Yates J and Aston J |
Pillans & Rose v Van Mierop & Hopkins (1765) 3 Burr 1663 is a case concerning letters of credit, and the doctrine of consideration. It has been recommended as a landmark case in English contract law.[1] In it, Lord Mansfield tentatively expressed a view that the doctrine of consideration was redundant. It was doubted in a later case by the House of Lords, Rann v Hughes.[2]
Facts
Pillans & Rose were in business together as mechant bankers in Rotterdam. They agreed to accept bills from White, an Irish merchant, on one condition. White had to make sure Van Mierop & Hopkins, a big London firm, would guarantee the bills. Van Mierop confirmed that they would do so and would guarantee a pre-existing duty of White to pay Pillans. However, before the bills were drawn on Van Mierop, White went insolvent. Van Mierop refused to honour the bills. Van Mierop argued that Pillans had provided no consideration for their guarantee since there was the rule that past consideration is not a good consideration.
Judgment
Lord Mansfield held that the doctrine of consideration should not be applied to preclude enforcement of promises made in mercantile transactions.
“ | This is a matter of great consequence to trade and commerce, in every light...
I take it, that the ancient notion about the want of consideration was for the sake of evidence only: for when it is reduced into writing, as in covenants, specialities, bonds, etc, there was no objection to the want of consideration. And the Statute of Frauds proceeded on the same principle. In commercial cases amongst merchants, the want of consideration is not an objection... If a man agrees that he will do the formal part, the law looks upon it (in the case of acceptance of a bill) as if actually done. It would be very destructive to trade, and to trust in commercial dealing if they could. |
” |
Wilmot J said,
“ | whether this be an actual acceptance, or an agreement to accept, it ought equally to bind. An agreement to accept a bill "to be drawn in the future" would (as it seems to me) by connection and relation, bind on account of the antecedent relation. And I see no difference between itself being before or after the bill was drawn. | ” |
See also
- Swift v. Tyson 41 US 1 (1842)
Notes
- ↑ G McMeel, ch 2 in C Mitchell and P Mitchell, Landmark Cases in the Law of Contract (2008)
- ↑ 17 TR 350
References
- G McMeel, ch 2 in C Mitchell and P Mitchell, Landmark Cases in the Law of Contract (2008)
- Grotius, War & Peace, Book II, Ch 9, para 6, 703-4 and 719-20
- Pufendorf, The Whole Duty of Man According to the Law of Nature, Ch IX, para V-IX, 110-1