This article considers the extent to which an Australian court might be willing to declare a contractual clause to be a ‘penalty’, and so not be enforceable. A recent High Court decision takes a broader view of the courts’ jurisdiction to relieve against ‘penalties’ than has previously been the case. This article has two purposes; first, it critically considers whether the Court’s position is correct, having regard to the long history and rationale for the rule. Secondly, it considers whether the doctrine forbidding penalties in contracts remains an appropriate stand-alone doctrine in contemporary contract law, or whether a recasting of the law in this area is desirable. It concludes that the High Court missed an opportunity to consider mor...
Why did Antonio agree to give Shylock a pound of his flesh in the Merchant of Venice? Why was Shyloc...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
This article considers the current state of the law with respect to penalties in contracts in the li...
Whether a contractual term is penal and therefore unenforceable has usually been determined by disti...
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...
An ‘agreed damages clause’ is a contractual provision whereby the parties agree on the damages one p...
As a consequence of the rule against penalties, contractual clauses with a penal character are unenf...
It has always been a common drafting technique in English and Australian law for contracts to contai...
This case note, co-authored with one of my Honours students, draws attention to a significant Englis...
In Andrews v ANZ, the High Court of Australia held that the rule against contractual penalties can a...
This article considers anew the question of whether discussion of contractual clauses as involving p...
This paper focuses on the common law doctrine of the penalty rule and the recent Supreme Court decis...
The joint appeals in Cavendish Square Holdings v El Makdessi and Beavis v ParkingEye 1 offered the U...
Why did Antonio agree to give Shylock a pound of his flesh in the Merchant of Venice? Why was Shyloc...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
This article considers the current state of the law with respect to penalties in contracts in the li...
Whether a contractual term is penal and therefore unenforceable has usually been determined by disti...
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...
An ‘agreed damages clause’ is a contractual provision whereby the parties agree on the damages one p...
As a consequence of the rule against penalties, contractual clauses with a penal character are unenf...
It has always been a common drafting technique in English and Australian law for contracts to contai...
This case note, co-authored with one of my Honours students, draws attention to a significant Englis...
In Andrews v ANZ, the High Court of Australia held that the rule against contractual penalties can a...
This article considers anew the question of whether discussion of contractual clauses as involving p...
This paper focuses on the common law doctrine of the penalty rule and the recent Supreme Court decis...
The joint appeals in Cavendish Square Holdings v El Makdessi and Beavis v ParkingEye 1 offered the U...
Why did Antonio agree to give Shylock a pound of his flesh in the Merchant of Venice? Why was Shyloc...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...
Focusing on two recent decisions handed down by the highest authority in the United Kingdom and Aust...