As a consequence of the rule against penalties, contractual clauses with a penal character are unenforceable. The rule has recently undergone significant revision in both the United Kingdom and Australia, following decisions by the highest courts in those jurisdictions. This article sets out and considers the options that those decisions put forward for the development of the rule against penalties in New Zealand. The variants are presented in terms of answers to two questions. The first is the "engagement question": which kinds of contractual clauses are capable of being subject to the rule against penalties? At first glance, the English and Australian authorities present different answers to this question. However, we argue that their ans...
In Andrews v ANZ, the High Court of Australia held that the rule against contractual penalties can a...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
This chapter analyses recent developments in Australian law and English law in relation to the rule ...
As a consequence of the rule against penalties, contractual clauses with a penal character are unenf...
Whether a contractual term is penal and therefore unenforceable has usually been determined by disti...
This case note, co-authored with one of my Honours students, draws attention to a significant Englis...
This article considers the extent to which an Australian court might be willing to declare a contrac...
This article considers the current state of the law with respect to penalties in contracts in the li...
It has always been a common drafting technique in English and Australian law for contracts to contai...
An ‘agreed damages clause’ is a contractual provision whereby the parties agree on the damages one p...
All major common law countries have a judge-made rule according to which a contractual stipulation o...
Recent case law has brought the common law contractual penalty doctrine under scrutiny and has creat...
A contractual clause may provide that a party to the contract, on failing to perform an obligation u...
This paper focuses on the common law doctrine of the penalty rule and the recent Supreme Court decis...
Building on two seminal cases that consider the character of penalty clauses, Paciocco v Australia a...
In Andrews v ANZ, the High Court of Australia held that the rule against contractual penalties can a...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
This chapter analyses recent developments in Australian law and English law in relation to the rule ...
As a consequence of the rule against penalties, contractual clauses with a penal character are unenf...
Whether a contractual term is penal and therefore unenforceable has usually been determined by disti...
This case note, co-authored with one of my Honours students, draws attention to a significant Englis...
This article considers the extent to which an Australian court might be willing to declare a contrac...
This article considers the current state of the law with respect to penalties in contracts in the li...
It has always been a common drafting technique in English and Australian law for contracts to contai...
An ‘agreed damages clause’ is a contractual provision whereby the parties agree on the damages one p...
All major common law countries have a judge-made rule according to which a contractual stipulation o...
Recent case law has brought the common law contractual penalty doctrine under scrutiny and has creat...
A contractual clause may provide that a party to the contract, on failing to perform an obligation u...
This paper focuses on the common law doctrine of the penalty rule and the recent Supreme Court decis...
Building on two seminal cases that consider the character of penalty clauses, Paciocco v Australia a...
In Andrews v ANZ, the High Court of Australia held that the rule against contractual penalties can a...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
This chapter analyses recent developments in Australian law and English law in relation to the rule ...