A collateral contract is usually a single term
contract, made in
consideration
Consideration is a concept of English common law and is a necessity for simple contracts but not for special contracts (contracts by deed). The concept has been adopted by other common law jurisdictions.
The court in ''Currie v Misa'' declared ...
of the party for whose benefit the contract operates agreeing to enter into the principal or main contract, which sets out additional terms relating to the same subject matter as the main contract. For example, a collateral contract is formed when one party pays the other party a certain sum for entry into another contract. A collateral contract may be between one of the parties and a third party.
It can also be epitomized as follows: a collateral contract is one that induces a person to enter into a separate "primary" contract. For example, if X agrees to buy goods from Y that will, accordingly, be manufactured by Z, and does so on the strength of Z's assurance as to the high quality of the goods, X and Z may be held to have made a collateral contract consisting of Z's promise of quality given in consideration of X's promise to enter into the main contract with Y.
Elements of a valid collateral contract
A party to an existing contract may attempt to show that a collateral contract exists if their claim for a breach of contract fails because the statement they relied upon was not held to be a
term of the main contract. It has been held that for this to be successful, the statement must have been promissory in nature.
[''J J Savage & Sons Pty Ltd v Blakney'' (1970) 119 CLR 435.] Remedies may be awarded for breach of a collateral contract.
Promissory in nature
A collateral contract is one where the parties to one contract enter into or promise to enter into another contract. Thus, the two contracts are connected and it may be enforced even though it forms no constructive part of the original contract.
In ''
JJ Savage and Sons Pty Ltd v Blakney'' a mere expression of opinion was held insufficient to be satisfied as a promise. In ''
Crown Melbourne Limited v Cosmopolitan Hotel (Vic) Pty Ltd
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'' a statement by a landlord made to intending tenants when negotiating a lease that they would be “looked after at renewal time”, would not bind the landlord to offer a further five year lease.
Intention to induce
The promisor must have expressly or impliedly requested about the main contract and his promissory statement must have intended to induce the entry of the other party into the main contract. According to
Lord Denning MR, a collateral contract is held binding "when a person gives a promise, or an assurance to another, intending that he should act on it by entering into a contract'.
Consistency
A collateral contract, if forged between the same parties as the main contract, must not contradict the main contract. That is, if the term was agreed upon prior to the completion of the formal contract (but was still included as a term, and could not be executed until completion of the second term), the first term will still be allowed.
[''Hoyt's Pty Ltd v Spencer'' (1919) 27 CLR 133.] Essentially the collateral contracts cannot contradict any element of the main contract nor the rights created by it.
Letter of credit
A theory sustains that is feasible to typify
letter of credit as a collateral
contract for a third-party beneficiary because letters of credit are prompted by the buyer’s necessity and in application of the theory of
Jean Domat
Jean Domat, or Daumat (30 November 162514 March 1696) was a French jurist.
Life
Domat was born at Clermont in Auvergne. He studied the humaniora in Paris, where he befriended Blaise Pascal, and later law at the University of Bourges. Domat clo ...
the cause of a letter of credit is that a bank issue a credit in favor of a seller to release the buyer of his obligation to pay directly to the seller with
legal tender. There are in fact three different entities participating in the letter of credit transaction: the seller, the buyer, and the banker. Therefore, a letter of credit theoretically fits as a collateral contract accepted by conduct, or in other words, an
implied-in-fact contract.
it is shortly called as LOC
Exception to other legal rules
Privity of contract
Collateral contracts are an exception to the
privity of contract doctrine, which provides that a contract cannot impose obligations or confer rights on a non-contracting party. However, in circumstances where a collateral contract is established between a third party and one of the contracting parties, the Court may allow rights or impose obligations on the non-contracting party, as illustrated in the earlier tortious case of ''
Donoghue v Stevenson''.
Parol evidence rule
Common law recognises collateral contract as an exception to
parol evidence rule, meaning that admissible evidence of a collateral contract can be used to exclude the operation of the
parol evidence rule. Practically, it is rare to find collateral contract as an exception as it must be strictly proved; and the burden of proof is only eased if the subject matter with which the main contract deals is more unusual.
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Notable cases
In the English case of ''
Barry v Davies'', it was held that an auctioneer and a buyer had formed a collateral contract.
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1 WLR 1962 It was held that even though the main contract does not involve the auctioneer, benefits given to the auctioneer for increasing the price of a bid constitutes a good consideration.
In ''
Hoyt's Pty Ltd v Spencer
The Hoyts Group of companies in Australia and New Zealand includes Hoyts Cinemas and Val Morgan. Hoyts operates more than 450 cinema screens and 55,000 seats, making it Australia's second largest movie exhibitor after Event Hospita ...
'', a landlord has promised orally not to exercise the right to termination in the principal contract if tenant signed the contract; landlord ended up terminating the main contract, whereas tenant's appeal was dismissed by the Court.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Collateral Contract
Contract law