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Ecotech Homes (New Zealand) Limited v Baumann [2016] NZHC 1444 (29 June 2016)

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Ecotech Homes (New Zealand) Limited v Baumann [2016] NZHC 1444 (29 June 2016)

Last Updated: 2 August 2016


IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND NELSON REGISTRY



CIV-2016-442-000012 [2016] NZHC 1444

BETWEEN
ECOTECH HOMES (NEW ZEALAND)
LIMITED Applicant
AND
MARKUS BAUMANN Respondent


Hearing:
10 June 2016
Appearances:
K M McMullen for Applicant
G M Downing for Respondent
Judgment:
29 June 2016




JUDGMENT OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE MATTHEWS


Introduction

[1] Ecotech Homes (New Zealand) Limited (Ecotech) applies to set aside a demand issued against it by the respondent (Mr Baumann) under s 289 of the Companies Act 1993 (the Act). The demand requires payment by Ecotech of the sum of $40,265.29. This sum represents a deposit paid by Mr Baumann to Ecotech under a contract dated 13 April 2015 by which he agreed to purchase a modular home. Mr Baumann maintains that he has validly cancelled the contract for breach by Ecotech, entitling him to repayment of his deposit.

[2] The statutory purpose of a demand under s 289 of the Act is to lay an evidentiary foundation for an application to the Court to appoint a liquidator under s

241. One of the grounds for an appointment is that the company in question is unable to pay its debts. Under s 287 a company is presumed to be unable to pay its

debts if it fails to comply with a demand under s 289.





ECOTECH HOMES (NEW ZEALAND) LTD v BAUMANN [2016] NZHC 1444 [29 June 2016]

[3] Section 290 of the Act provides that the Court may set aside a statutory demand on the application of the company against which it is issued. The application must be made within 10 working days of service of the demand, and served on the creditor who issued the demand within the same time. No extension of these time limits can be given. The application may be granted on certain grounds, the first of which is that there is a substantial dispute over whether or not the debt is owing or is due. Ecotech relies on this ground. It also relies on the third, namely that the demand ought to be set aside on other grounds, in this case that the deposit is not a sum which can be demanded under s 289, as a matter of law.

[4] The Court of Appeal has laid down the way in which the Court is to approach an application under s 290:1

[24] We note that the statutory scheme is for applications to set aside statutory demands to be a summary proceeding. ... The section calls for a prompt judgment as to whether there is a genuine and substantial dispute. It is not the task of the Court to resolve the dispute. The test may be compared with the principles developed in cognate fields such as applications to remove caveats, leave to appeal an arbitrator’s award and opposition to summary judgment.

[25] ... The tight time constraints distinguish the s 290 discretion from that to be exercised on, say, a summary judgment application, where the presence of complex legal issues is not necessarily a bar to a remedy. As with leave to appeal an arbitrator’s award, the hearing should, in the normal course, be short and to the point, and the judgment likewise.

[5] Recently the Court of Appeal observed:2

[22] It is important to keep in mind the words of the statute. What the applicant must show is that the dispute it raises has substance; the applicant must explain to the court what the dispute is; and the dispute so shown must be real and not a fanciful or insubstantial dispute. The Court must bear in mind that it is operating in the summary jurisdiction, with the accompanying disadvantages that brings for any applicant. The Court must also keep in mind the requirement that what is intended to be a summary hearing should not be converted into a full-blown trial.

[6] Evidence in this case is given by affidavit. As a general rule the Court will not determine genuine conflicts of evidence given in this way. However, the general


1 Industrial Group Ltd v Bakker [2011] NZCA 142, (2011) 20 PRNZ 413 (citations omitted).

  1. AAI Ltd v 92 Lichfield Street Ltd (in rec & liq) [2015] NZCA 559, per Winkelmann J (citations omitted).

rule does not always apply. In Attorney-General v Rakiura Holdings Ltd the Court said:3

In a matter such as this it would not be normal for a judge to attempt to resolve any conflicts in evidence contained in affidavits or to assess the credibility or plausibility of averments in them. On the other hand, in the words Lord Diplock in Eng Mee Yong v Letchumanan, the Judge is not bound:

to accept uncritically, as raising a dispute of fact which calls for further investigation, every statement on an affidavit however equivocal, lacking in precision, inconsistent with undisputed contemporary documents or other statements by the same deponent, or inherently improbable in itself it may be.

(citations omitted)

Relevant facts

[7] Ecotech and a related company, Modular Housing Solutions (New Zealand) Limited (Modular) supply and, if required, instal modular houses. According to Mr A S Frost, the director of both companies, they work together on each project though have different roles. Modular takes responsibility for manufacturing and delivery of each modular home up to its arrival and clearance through the port of New Zealand in which it arrives from its manufacturer in China. Ecotech then picks up the modular home from the port and deals with delivery, site works and completion.

[8] Notwithstanding this apparently clear delineation of roles the contract Mr Baumann entered for his purchase of a modular home starts with a paragraph described as “company details” which are given as “Modular Housing Solutions (New Zealand) Limited, trading as Ecotech Homes (New Zealand) Limited (Ecotech)”. Despite this nonsensical provision, all the obligations on the part of the supplier are stated to be given by “Ecotech” and although the copy of the contract produced to the Court is not a signed copy it provides for execution by Ecotech Homes (New Zealand) Limited and not by Modular Housing Solutions (New Zealand) Limited. I am assured that a contract was signed by both Ecotech and Mr Baumann in the form produced to the Court. The deposit was paid to Ecotech. I

proceed, as did counsel, on the basis that a contract was signed in the form produced,


3 Attorney-General v Rakiura Holdings Ltd (1986) 1 PRNZ 12 (HC) at 14.

and I am satisfied that the contracting party is Ecotech Homes (New Zealand) Limited. Neither counsel suggested otherwise.

[9] The contract provides for a purchase price of $134,217.65 including GST, and payment of a deposit of $40,265.29 immediately after execution. The contract then provides:

The balance of the Contract Price is payable on the earlier of issue of a Code Compliance Certificate or 60 days of the date of the original Bill of Lading certificate. Prior to shipping the Client will provide to Ecotech a Letter of credit for an amount of $93,952.36.

[10] While Mr Baumann’s home was being manufactured in China, Ecotech undertook preparatory site works on a property which Mr Baumann owned, ready for the house to be delivered and placed on foundations once it arrived in New Zealand. Difficulties arose, however, in relation to the provision by Mr Baumann of a Letter of credit as required by the contract. According to Mr Jones, the home was complete and ready to be shipped from its manufacturer in China by November 2015. In order for it to be released, however, Mr Jones says that Ecotech was required to submit the Letter of credit to be provided by Mr Baumann under the contract to the Chinese manufacturer. Mr Jones says he advised Mr Baumann in the early stages of their contractual negotiations that the required Letter of credit would need to be an international Letter of credit rather than a domestic Letter of credit.

[11] Mr Baumann says that in October 2015 Mr Frost told him he wanted to make a change to the contract. Instead of providing Ecotech with a Letter of credit in the terms set out in the contract, Mr Baumann would be required to provide a Letter of credit in Chinese currency in favour of the Chinese factory that was manufacturing the home for Ecotech. Mr Baumann says he sought advice from his bank (BNZ) and was told that this was not possible. He produced an email from BNZ advising that it would only issue a Letter of credit in New Zealand dollars, and only in favour of Ecotech not a Chinese company, as it was Ecotech with which Mr Baumann had contracted. On 24 November 2015 a Letter of credit in these terms was provided to Mr Baumann by BNZ, and was tendered by Mr Baumann to Ecotech in accordance with what he saw as his obligation under the contract. The Letter issued was in

favour of Ecotech in the sum of $NZ93,952.36. It provided for a latest shipping date of 11 December 2015, was to expire on 29 February 2016, and was irrevocable.

[12] Although, according to Mr Frost, Ecotech tendered this Letter of credit to the Chinese manufacturer, the manufacturer would not accept it. Ecotech continued to ask Mr Baumann for a Letter of credit in favour of the Chinese manufacturer and in Chinese currency; Mr Baumann remained unable to provide the Letter of credit sought. Correspondence was exchanged between the solicitors for each party but no progress was made in resolving the stand-off. The BNZ Letter of credit was not drawn down by Ecotech, and nor could it be because the date for payment of the balance of the contract sum had not arrived. The house remained in China. After the Letter of credit expired Mr Baumann’s solicitors sent a Letter to Ecotech’s solicitors seeking both the return of the deposit and payment of losses that Mr Baumann maintained he had suffered, a total of $58,822.33. The statutory demand in issue on this application was also issued that day, though in respect only of the deposit.

[13] Mr Downing, for Mr Baumann, argues that the notice under s 289 constituted cancellation of the contract, and says that as a result the deposit is repayable. Ms McMullen, for Ecotech, says that Mr Baumann did not fulfil his obligation under the contract to provide an international Letter of credit to the Chinese manufacturer, that he repudiated the contract and his deposit has been forfeited.

[14] There are two issues to be decided:

(a) Is there a substantial dispute on the facts over whether or not Mr Baumann complied with his contractual obligation in relation to provision of a Letter of credit?

(b) If Mr Baumann is not in breach of the contract can he demand repayment of his deposit as a matter of law?

First issue: Is there a substantial dispute on the facts over whether or not Mr Baumann complied with his contractual obligation in relation to provision of a Letter of credit?

[15] I have recorded the express contractual obligation on Mr Baumann in paragraph [9]. The obligation has two elements. The first is to pay the balance of the contract price either on issue of code compliance for the new home, or 60 days after the date of the original bill of lading, whichever is earlier. The second is the provision of a Letter of credit to Ecotech prior to shipping of the home from China.

[16] Notwithstanding these clear contractual terms, Mr Jones contends that he made it clear to Mr Baumann that Mr Baumann was obliged to provide a Letter of credit in favour of the Chinese manufacturer in Chinese currency. By this means, Ecotech contends that there is a substantial dispute on the facts in relation to Mr Baumann’s obligation.

[17] I am not satisfied this is the case, for four reasons, but before setting these out it is necessary to understand the purpose of a Letter of credit. This is well summarised by Lord Denning in Pavia & Co v Thurmann-Nielsen in the following terms:4

The sale of goods across the world is now usually arranged by means of [irrevocable] credits. The buyer requests his banker to open a credit in favour of the seller and in pursuance of that request the banker, or his foreign agent, issues [an irrevocable] credit in favour of the seller. The creditors are promised by the banker to pay money to the seller in return for the shipping documents. Then the seller, when he presents the documents, gets paid the contract price. The conditions of the credit must be strictly fulfilled, otherwise the seller would not be entitled to draw on it.

I have substituted the word “irrevocable”, for the word used at the time this case was decided, “confirmed”.

[18] Consistent with this principle the Letter of credit provided by the BNZ was an irrevocable promise to pay the sum of $93,952.36 in the following terms:

Upon our receipt of the documents in order, at maturity, we shall honour the presentation as instructed. The negotiating bank is to forward documents in


4 Pavia & Co v Thurmann-Nielsen (1952) 2 QB 84 (CA) at 88, per Denning LJ.

one lot by courier to Bank of New Zealand International Banking Centre ... [address follows].

[19] Maturity is stated to be 29 February 2016 New Zealand time, and the document required is a tax invoice to show the full value of NZ$134,217.65 inclusive of GST, less the deposit paid of NZ$40,265.29 showing balance of NZ$93,952.36. The payment terms are either presentation of the code of compliance certificate or 60 days from the date of the original bill of lading, whichever is the earlier.

[20] I turn now to the four reasons for not accepting Mr Jones’ contention. First, the contractual obligation to provide a Letter of credit is clear and without ambiguity. The Letter of credit issued by the BNZ to Mr Baumann, provided to but rejected by Ecotech, precisely complied with the express wording of the contract, which was drafted by Ecotech. It gave Ecotech an irrevocable undertaking that it would be paid the balance of the contract price at the time the contract required. If Mr Jones had wished to specify a different contractual arrangement for payment, he could have drafted the contract in different terms. These terms would have specified an obligation on Mr Baumann to pay the Chinese manufacturer, not Ecotech, in Chinese currency, not New Zealand dollars and presumably at a Chinese address. That did not occur despite Mr Jones’ contention that he initially advised Mr Baumann during contractual negotiation that an internal international Letter of credit would be required.

[21] If Mr Jones intended that Ecotech would impose that contractual obligation on Mr Baumann at the conclusion of those negotiations, it could easily have done so.

[22] Secondly, there is a significant difficulty in accepting Mr Jones’ version of events given the timing of the obligation to pay the balance of the contract price. This did not arise until the earlier of the issue of a code compliance certificate, or 60 days from the date of the original bill of lading certificate. I take the latter provision to mean 60 days from point of departure from China. The former, the issue of a code compliance certificate, could not take place until the house was in New Zealand, and installed in accordance with the local authority’s building code. There is a significant inherent unlikelihood in there being any obligation on Mr Baumann to

give an irrevocable Letter of credit to the Chinese manufacturer before the house left China when he was not obliged to pay for it until it was in this country, or 60 days after it was shipped.

[23] Thirdly, Mr Jones says that one of the steps Ecotech took in pursuance of the contract was to pay the manufacturer.5 That is consistent with Mr Baumann giving a Letter of credit to Ecotech to give it comfort to pay the manufacturer, and inconsistent with the inverse.

[24] This leads to the fourth point. The contract is well capable of realistic commercial application if complied with precisely as drafted. When the BNZ Letter of credit was presented to Ecotech it knew it would be paid the balance of the contract sum, by the BNZ, because the Letter of credit was irrevocable. It also knew when it would be paid. Fortified by that assurance Ecotech could have paid the Chinese supplier in accordance with its apparent requirement that it be paid before shipping the house. That would have accorded with the very reason that Letters of credit are issued. In my opinion the contract provided for an entirely workable commercial arrangement. Why Mr Jones sought to give the clear wording of the contract a meaning that it is not capable of bearing, tried to require Mr Baumann to pay for his house before it left China instead of two months later, or on code compliance, and failed to pay the Chinese supplier when his company had an irrevocable assurance of payment by Mr Baumann’s bank is not explained. There is no reason to interpret the clause in a way that differs from its clear meaning in order to give commercial efficacy to the contract.

[25] I am satisfied there is no substantial dispute about Mr Baumann’s contractual

obligation in relation to giving a Letter of credit to Ecotech, or over whether he complied with that obligation.











5 Affidavit of Mr Jones dated 15 March 2016 at [12.2].

Second issue: If Mr Baumann is not in breach of the contract can he demand repayment of his deposit?

[26] Mr Downing says that by issuing his notice under s 289 Mr Baumann validly cancelled the contract. Although the notice does not expressly state that it is an act of cancellation, the sum claimed is described as:

the amount due and payable being the deposit paid by [Mr Baumann] under the pre-fabricated building supply agreement dated 13 April 2015, which agreement has terminated.

[27] Section 8(2) of the Contractual Remedies Act 1979 provides that cancellation may be made known by words or by conduct evincing an intention to cancel or both. It is not necessary to use any particular form of words as long as the intention to cancel is made known.

[28] Mr Downing argues that Mr Baumann’s intention to cancel the contract was made known in terms of s 8(2) by the statement that the agreement had terminated, and the claim for return of the deposit. Ms McMullen did not argue otherwise. I accept that the statutory demand issued by Mr Baumann was a valid notice of cancellation. It clearly showed an intention to cancel.

[29] In view of this, and the finding I have made on the first issue, Mr Baumann is, for present purposes, a contracting party who has validly cancelled a contract for breach by the other party to the contract.

[30] Mr Downing argues, correctly in my view, that it is open to the Court to make an order granting to Mr Baumann a remedy under s 9 of the Contractual Remedies Act including, of present relevance, a direction that Ecotech pay to him the amount of the deposit. With respect, though, that is not the question presently before the Court. Ms McMullen accepts that such a proceeding could be brought. She says that this is the course Mr Baumann should follow but that the deposit paid by Mr Baumann is not a debt that is due, and for which a demand can therefore be made under s 289 of the Act.

[31] Ms McMullen says that a deposit is a payment made by a purchaser to seal the bargain struck with the vendor and is the price paid by the purchaser for the

vendor’s willingness to commit to the contract of sale. She is correct in that contention, and in her further contention that in the event of default by a purchaser, a deposit is forfeited to a vendor. There is a comprehensive discussion of this in Garratt v Ikeda.6

[32] Here the point is different. The purchaser is not in default. Rather, the vendor is in default for not having provided the house, despite Mr Baumann having complied with his obligation under the contract. In this circumstance a purchaser has certain remedies. These may be provided by the contract itself,7 but the contract in the present case is silent on what should happen to the deposit in the event of Ecotech not performing its obligations under the contract.

[33] There are also situations where a purchaser may recover a deposit under the general law.8 First, a purchaser can recover a deposit after a purchaser has cancelled under s 7 of the Contractual Remedies Act 1979 (as argued by Mr Downing, [30] above). No doubt that is the basis on which Mr Baumann’s solicitors wrote to Ecotech’s solicitors not only demanding repayment of the deposit, but also seeking recompense for other damages suffered by Mr Baumann as a result of Ecotech not

performing its obligation under the contract. Secondly, a purchaser can also recover a deposit when the contract is being cancelled by agreement of the contracting parties, though this is of no application in the present case. Thirdly, there can be a claim for money had and received where a contract is avoided for failure of a contingent condition.

[34] None of these avenues for recovery of the deposit is relevant to the present case unless the deposit is classified as a due debt for the purposes of s 289 of the Act. In OPC Managed Rehab Ltd v Accident Compensation Corporation the Court of Appeal discussed the meaning of the word “debt” in the context of s 289. The Court

said:9




6 Garratt v Ikeda [2001] NZCA 316; [2002] 1 NZLR 577 (CA).

7 See for example, the NZLS/ADLSI Agreement for Sale and Purchase of Real Estate (edition

2012) clause 3.4 in common use for sale and purchase of land.

8 D McMorland Sale of Land (3rd ed, Cathcart Trust, 2011) at [7.12] and [5.16].

9 OPC Managed Rehab Ltd v Accident Compensation Corporation [2005] NZCA 322; [2006] 1 NZLR 778.

[54] In the result, we conclude that, if a payment is received in circumstances where the recipient is obliged to repay it, whether because of a contractual or statutory provision to that effect or because the circumstances give rise to an obligation to repay on the basis of money had and received, the amount can be treated as a “debt due” for the purposes of s

289(2)(a)...

[35] As I have observed, there is no contractual provision imposing on Ecotech an obligation to repay; nor is there any relevant statutory provision to that effect. Therefore, it is necessary to decide whether the circumstances of this case give rise to an obligation to repay the deposit on the basis of the restitutionary remedy of money had and received.

[36] An action for money had and received is an aspect of the law of restitution. It is an action used by a claimant seeking to recover from a defendant money which has been paid to that defendant in certain circumstances. Long recognised circumstances in which the action will lie include where money has been paid by mistake, where consideration given has totally failed, or as a result of imposition, extortion or oppression, or as a result of undue advantage having been taken of a

plaintiff’s situation in certain circumstances.10

[37] In the present case Mr Downing argues that consideration has totally failed, because Ecotech has not delivered the house which Mr Baumann contracted to buy, through no fault of his. In short, Mr Baumann has not received anything pursuant to the contract.

[38] The force of that argument can readily be seen. Ms McMullen points out, however, that provision of the house was only one aspect of the contract. Ecotech was also obliged to carry out foundation work on the site, and to apply for and obtain building consent. According to Mr Jones, it provided design assistance in adapting a standard modular house to the specific requirements of Mr Baumann, including assisting with the factory shop drawings and drafting specifications for production drawings. It assisted with obtaining a building consent, including obtaining engineering advice, attended to issues arising from the production line of the house,

provided shipping certification at a cost of approximately NZ$8,000, and carried out

10 Moses v Macferlan [1760] EngR 713; (1760) 2 Burr 1005 (KB) at 1012.

90 per cent of the required foundation works at Mr Baumann’s site ready for delivery of the home.

[39] Mr Downing argues that none of that work has provided any benefit to Mr Baumann given that it is all related to a house he has not received, including the foundations installed on his land which could only be useful if he purchased or built another house of precisely the same dimensions, for which the foundations were in all respects suited, and if the local authority gave building consent for their use for a different house.

[40] All of the work outlined by Mr Jones in evidence was directed at the eventual intended outcome under the contract, the installation and code compliance certification of Mr Baumann’s home on his site. I accept, as Mr Jones claims, that some of the monies paid by Mr Baumann by way of deposit have been expended by Ecotech in taking the steps to which Mr Jones refers. The difficulty is, however, that without his house having arrived from China and been installed on his land, nothing which has been done by Ecotech appears to provide him with any value or benefit at all. On the other hand, had Ecotech delivered the house to Mr Baumann’s site and undertaken all other work required to obtain code compliance, all the work done prior to now would be of significant value.

[41] On an application to set aside a statutory demand it is for the applicant to establish the basis on which it should be set aside. Ecotech has not provided any evidence to show that any of the work it says it has undertaken has any value to Mr Baumann, or will have any value to Mr Baumann unless and until the house he contracted to buy, and for which the foundations were provided, is installed on site and certified as code compliant. For example, there is scant evidence in relation to the foundations installed on the site, and no evidence that those foundations can be used for any other house, foundation design being specific to a given house both in terms of lay-out and suitability, as well as being compliant with a building consent issued in respect of a specific building project. In the absence of any such evidence, the position disclosed is that Mr Baumann has not received any benefit at all for the payment he has made to Ecotech.

[42] Where there has been a total failure of consideration the recipient of a payment is obliged to repay it, and the amount to be repaid can be treated as a debt due for the purposes of s 289(2)(a) of the Act.11

[43] A claim for return of money on the basis of a total failure of consideration is a claim based not in contract but on the principle of restitution. Availability of a remedy for breach of contract does not prevent a claim for restitution based on total failure of consideration.12 The word “consideration” is not used in this context as consideration in the law of contract. More recently the courts have come to describe this remedy as a response to a total failure of basis, that is to say the basis upon which the money in issue was paid has entirely failed, whether the basis on which it was paid was pursuant to a contract, or in some other circumstance. As the learned authors of Goff & Jones, The Law of Unjust Enrichment put it:13

The core underlying idea of failure of basis is simple: a benefit has been conferred on the joint understanding that the recipient’s right to retain it is conditional. If the condition is not fulfilled the recipient must return the benefit. The condition might take one of a variety of forms. For instance, it might consist in the recipient doing or giving something in return for the benefit (hereafter referred to as “counter-performance”).

[44] The premise underlying this right of restitution is that the entire basis of the arrangement which led to a payment being made by one party to another has failed. Historically, a distinction was drawn between a benefit conferred by a monetary payment, and other forms of non-monetary benefits.14 The distinction, caused initially by different procedures for claims to recover monetary payments and others, was important because where the benefit conferred took the form of a money payment the failure of basis was required to be total. No equivalent requirement was imposed by the courts where the benefit was non-financial.15 If even a small part of the benefit for which a payment was made had been conferred, an action to recover money based on total failure of basis would not lie. Difficulties said to justify this

included valuation of the benefit received, though in numerous areas of the law

11 OPC Managed Rehab Ltd v Accident Compensation Corporation, above n 9, at [54], applied in

SHT Holdings Ltd v Rowberry [2015] NZHC 3281.

12 Goss v Chilcott [1996] 3 NZLR 385 (PC) at 390-391.

13 Goff & Jones The Law of Unjust Enrichment (8th ed, Sweet & Maxwell, United Kingdom, 2011)

at [12.01].

14 See the discussion in Goff & Jones, above n 13, at [12.03]-[12.05].

15 E G Powell v Braun [1954] 1 WLR 401.

courts have not been reluctant to embark on exercises of valuation, often with expert evidence to assist. And the case frequently cited for the proposition that the Court would require total failure of consideration because of the difficulty of apportioning the value received, Whincup v Hughes,16 was preceded by at least two cases in which the courts were willing to undertake an apportionment in materially similar circumstances.17

[45] Nor, in more recent years, has this difficulty stood in the way of restitution being granted in respect of monetary payments for total failure of basis, even where there has been some benefit to the payer. In Goss v Chilcott, the respondent had advanced a sum of money to the appellants. Two instalments of interest had been paid. The mortgage instrument was discharged by alteration of it without the knowledge of the appellants. The respondent sued to recover the principal sum. The Privy Council held that the alteration to the mortgage discharged the appellants from any liability under it, and from the obligation created by the appellants’ prior oral agreement to repay the advance which had merged in and been superseded by the mortgage. The Privy Council found, however, that the respondent could recover the principal sum: despite there having been payment of two instalments of interest, there had been a total failure of consideration in respect of the capital sum advanced,

and it was recoverable on that basis. The Court said:18

In the present case, since no part of the capital sum had been repaid, the failure of consideration for the capital sum would plainly have been total. But even if part of the capital sum had been repaid, the law would not hesitate to hold that the balance of the loan outstanding would be recoverable on the ground of failure of consideration; for at least in those cases in which apportionment can be carried out without difficulty, the law will allow partial recovery on this ground (see David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia. (citations omitted)

[46] The cases largely turn on their facts, as can be seen from the cases of

Fibrosa,19 and Stocznia Gdanska.20 In the former, a contract for the purchase of machines provided for payment in advance and for machines to be delivered to a


16 Whincup v Hughes (1871) LR 6 CP 78.

17 Newton v Rowse (1687) 1 Vern 460; Hirst v Tolson [1850] EngR 313; (1850) 42 ER 52 (Ch).

18 Goss v Chilcott, above n 12, at 391.

19 Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd [1942] UKHL 4; [1943] AC 32 (HL), applied in

Goss v Chilcott, above n 12.

20 Stocznia Gdanska v Latvian Shipping Co [1998] UKHL 9; [1998] 1 WLR 574 (HL).

buyer in Poland. The German occupation of Poland during the Second World War intervened and it was held that since the machines could not be delivered there had been a total failure of basis for the advance payment which had been made. The Court ordered its return.

[47] In Stocznia Gdanska the contract provided for the recipient of the payment to design, build, complete, and deliver six ships, with the price payable in instalments at specified stages of the work. The contract was terminated by the ship builder for non-payment of one of those instalments and the Court had to consider whether the instalments already paid could be immediately recovered on the ground of failure of basis. The House of Lords decided they could not. The payments were made not solely for the delivery of the vessels but also for their design and construction and since some part of that work had been undertaken the basis had not totally failed.

[48] The distinction between the two cases appears to be based on the fact that in Fibrosa the contract did not attribute any significance to preparatory work in relation to the machines, prior to delivery, whereas in Stocznia Gdanska the payment of instalments was conditional on progress in the design and construction of the vessels.

[49] The present case is aligned more closely with Fibrosa than Stocznia Gdanska. The fundamental obligation on Ecotech is set out in clause 1, where it is provided: “Ecotech will supply and deliver to the site of 28 Fellbridge Rise, Wakefield, Nelson, clear of duty, customs fees, shipping cost, port fees and GST”, after which follow a number of specifications for the kitset house to which the contract applied. In clause 2 a number of options are listed, said to be included in the contract price. These are the provision of transportation and crane trucks, foundations and sub-floor timber, home assembly and cantilevered roof/eaves, against which of each a sum is given. There is then reference to design plans, engineering, building consent fees, water tank and pump, water heating, connection to services, decking, kitchen appliances and window coverings, but in respect of these items the contract is contradictory. It provides for these items to be included in the quotation cost, and it then provides for them to be supplied and installed by the owner. Whatever this provision may be meant to mean, the specified sums for the first four items add up to $10,300 plus GST, but the deposit required by the contract

is $40,265.29, which is inclusive of GST and is 15 per cent of the contract price. It cannot therefore be said that the sum which Mr Baumann has paid is linked to any specific items or services to be provided by Ecotech, and unlike the payments required in Stocznia Gdanska this payment was not conditional on progress in the design or construction of the house.

[50] The next point to consider is that this is a contract for the supply of goods, together with limited services. The contract does not expressly state when title to the goods was to pass but a clear intention may be inferred that it would have passed on delivery to Mr Baumann. This is consistent with the balance of the purchase price not being paid until after that occurred, and with Ecotech’s obligation under clause 5 of the contract to insure the building for full replacement, plus 5 per cent, until the building was placed on foundations at Mr Baumann’s site. At that point Mr Baumann was required to insure it himself. As well, all the services anticipated by the contract are entirely required for the purpose of bringing about delivery of the house as I have said. Title to the house did not, therefore, pass to Mr Baumann.

[51] A case which is analogous is Rowland v Divall.21 The purchaser of a car did not receive good title and the Court found that he was entitled to recover the purchase price from the vendor, notwithstanding the fact that he had had use of the car for four months. The purchaser was not required to give any credit for the benefit he had had from the car for that period. In the present case, not only has Mr Baumann not received title to the house for which he made a substantial payment, he has had no use of it either. Even more so than in Rowland v Divall, the basis of the transaction between Ecotech and Mr Baumann has totally failed. Rowland v Divall and subsequent cases demonstrate that the concept of total failure of basis can ignore real benefits received by the payer if they are not the benefits bargained for, and

despite significant detrimental reliance by the payee.22








21 Rowland v Divall [1923] 2 KB 500 (CA).

22 See discussion in Hugh Beale (ed) Chitty on Contracts (32nd ed, Sweet & Maxwell, United

Kingdom, 2015) at [29-060].

Outcome

[52] I find that there is no basis to set aside the statutory demand issued by

Mr Baumann. The application is dismissed.

[53] I order Ecotech to pay to Mr Baumann the sum of $40,265.29 by 5.00 pm on the tenth working day after the date of this judgment, failing which Mr Baumann may make an application to put Ecotech into liquidation.

[54] Mr Baumann is entitled to costs. Ecotech will pay costs on a 2B basis together with disbursements fixed, if necessary, by the Registrar, on this application. It will also pay the reasonable solicitor and client costs of issue and service of the statutory demand. If counsel are unable to agree on the amount of the latter Mr Baumann may file within 10 working days a memorandum limited to two pages explaining his costs on the demand, and Ecotech may respond by memorandum within a further five working days limited to two pages explaining why it does not accept Mr Baumann’s assessment. These memoranda may be referred to me for a

decision on this issue on the papers.






J G Matthews

Associate Judge




















Solicitors:

Cavell Leitch, Christchurch.

McFadden McMeeken Phillips, Nelson.


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