posted on 2015-02-11, 12:11authored bySean R. Thomas
The history of the development of the implied terms on short delivery is a complex story of
judicial and academic ignorance of law and facts. Sir Mackenzie Chalmers’ statutory
formulation of the right to correct delivery was the same as that provided in Judah
Benjamin’s 1868 work on sales. However, Benjamin’s formulation was flawed, which led to a
highly unsatisfactory rule of law. This article considers the history of the case law on short
delivery, leading up to the 1893 codification. The operation of the statutory rule further
illustrates the depth of confusion which remained following codification. A comparison with
the history of short delivery in the United States demonstrates that the confusion within the
English system could easily have been avoided.
History
Citation
The Journal of Legal History, 2014, 35 (3), pp. 281-318 (37)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF ARTS, HUMANITIES AND LAW/School of Law