AFROTEC TECHNICAL SERVICES (NIG) LTD. V. MIA & SONS LIMITED & ANOR
AFROTEC TECHNICAL SERVICES (NIG) LTD. V. MIA & SONS
LIMITED & ANOR
CITATION: (2000) LPELR-SC.132/1992
OTHER
CITATIONS:
1 Afrotec
Tech. Servo (Nig.) Ltd. V. MIA & Sons Ltd (2000) 15 NWLR (Pt.692) 730
2 (2000)
12 S.C (Pt II) 1
3 (2000)
All N.L.R 533
In The Supreme Court of Nigeria
On Friday, the 15th day of December, 2000
Suit No: SC.132/1992
Before Their Lordships
ABUBAKAR BASHIR WALI
....... Justice of the Supreme Court
IDRIS LEGBO KUTIGI
....... Justice of the Supreme Court
ANTHONY IKECHUKWU IGUH
....... Justice of the Supreme Court
ALOYSIUS IYORGYER KATSINA-ALU
....... Justice of the Supreme Court
EMMANUEL OLAYINKA AYOOLA
....... Justice of the Supreme Court
Between
AFROTEC TECHNICAL SERVICES (NIG) LTD. Appellants
And
1. MIA & SONS LIMITED
2. AFCON ENGINEERING LIMITED Respondents
RATIO
DECIDENDI
1
COMMERCIAL LAW - SALE OF GOODS: whether an unpaid seller can
exercise statutory right of resale
"An unpaid seller can exercise the statutory right of resale
of the Goods in his possession whether or not property in the goods has passed
to the buyer or not and (the new buyer acquires good title in such goods."
PER KUTIGI, J.S.C. (P.43, Paras.C-D) - read in context
2
COMMERCIAL LAW - SALE OF GOODS: Rights of an unpaid seller
"Under section 48 of the Sales of Goods Act, the unpaid
seller retains the right to sell the identified property, where the buyer has
become insolvent. The right of sale can be exercised by the seller under this
section where he has been in continuous possession of the goods or where he has
regained possession by exercising his right of lien or stoppage of the goods in
transit. This right is available to him whether or not the property in the
goods has passed to the original buyer who has become insolvent by his failure
to pay or tender the purchase price as agreed in the contract within a
reasonable time. The intention to sell the goods must be notified to the
insolvent buyer. What is a reasonable time in this context is a question of
fact." Per KUTIGI J.S.C. (Pp.43-44, paras.E-A) - read in context
3
COMMERCIAL LAW - SALE OF GOODS: The object of sale of goods
"The object of sale of goods is generally to transfer
its ownership to the purchaser from the seller. See sections 16-19 of the Sale
of Goods Act, 1893. But where a contrary intention is shown the property in the
goods only passes to the buyer at such time as the parties to the contract
intend to. And for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties
regard must be had to the terms of the contract the conduct of the parties and
the circumstances of the case." Per Kutigi, J.S.C. (P. 38, Paras.E-G) -
read in context
4
COMMERCIAL LAW - RIGHT OF A SELLER: whether the right of a
seller to sue for the price of the goods is independent of his other remedies
against the goods.
"It is thus settled that the right of the seller to sue
for the price of the goods is independent of his other remedies against the
goods." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.63, Paras.D-E) - read in context
5
COMMERCIAL LAW - LIEN: nature of a lien
"A lien, broadly speaking, is a right to retain that
which is in one's possession belonging to another till certain demands of the
person in possession are satisfied. The unpaid seller's lien however, is his
entitlement to retain the goods in his possession until the buyer has paid or
tendered the whole of their price. See Martindale v. Smith (1841) 1 Q.B. 389 at
396. The point that must be emphasized is that the unpaid seller's right of
lien depends on his being in possession of the goods at the time he exercises
his right of lien. Even where the seller is in possession of the goods as agent
or bailee for the buyer, as it is the case in the present appeal, he may still
exercise right of lien. See Poulton and Son v. Anglo-American Oil Co. Ltd.
(1911) 27 T.L.R. 216." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.57, Paras.A-D) - read in
context
6
COMMERCIAL LAW - PAYMENT BY MEANS OF NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENT:
nature of payment by means of negotiable instrument
"It is equally well settled that payment by means of a
negotiable instrument is prima facie conditional on the instrument being
honoured at maturity. The seller's remedy to sue for the price is suspended
during the currency of the instrument. If the instrument is honoured at
maturity, the amount therein will accordingly, be deemed effectively paid. If,
on the other hand, it is dishonoured, the seller's remedies both under the
contract of sale in issue and the Sale of Goods Act,1893 automatically revives
and become enforceable." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.64, Paras.D-G) - read in
context
7
COMMERCIAL LAW - CONTRACT OF SALE: nature of contract of
sale
"a contract of-sale which under section 1 of the Sale
of Goods Act,1893, is a contract whereby the seller transfers or agrees to
transfer property in goods to the buyer for a money consideration called the
price. See Doak v. Bedford (1964) 2 Q.B. 587. Under section 1 (2) of the Sale
of Goods Act, 1893, hereinafter also referred to as the Act, a contract of sale
may be conditional or absolute. It, ought to be stressed from the onset,
however, that a contract of sale reduced into writing, such as Exhibit 1, must
be construed and given effect to like any other written contract. See
Coddington v. Paleologo ( 1867) L.R. 2 Exch. 193 at 200. So, where any right,
duty or liability would arise under a contract of sale by implication of law,
such right, duty or liability may be negatived or varied inter alia by the
express agreement of the parties. It is principally the intention of the
parties, as shown by the terms of the contract, amongst other considerations,
which determines the time when the property in the goods, the subject matter of
a contract of sale, is transferred or passes to the buyer. Accordingly, section
17(1) of the Act provides that where there is a contract for the sale of
specific goods, the property in them is transferred to the buyer at such time
as the parties thereto intend it to pass. No difficulty can therefore arise where
the contract between the parties expressly states when or at what time the
property in such goods passes to the buyer. Section 17(2) of the Act, however,
provides that for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties,
regard must be had to the terms of the contract, the conduct of the parties,
and the circumstances of the case. See Nanka-Bruce v. Commonwealth Trust Ltd.
(1926) A.C. 77." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (Pp.50-52, Paras.G-A) - read in context
8
COMMERCIAL LAW - LIEN: conditions under which a lien arises
"Lien arises if the following conditions are satisfied,
namely: 1. The seller is unpaid; 2. The goods have been sold without any
stipulation as to credit, or the stipulated period of credit has expired, or
the buyer has become insolvent; and 3. The seller is in possession of the goods
or part of them." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.57, Paras.D-F) - read in context
9
COMMERCIAL LAW - UNPAID SELLER: right of an unpaid seller on
a property
"There is also the provision of section 39(1)(c) which,
subject to the provisions of the Act and notwithstanding that the property in
the goods may have passed to the buyer, confers on the unpaid seller, a right
of resale of the goods but as limited by the Act. And by section 39(2) of the
Act, even where the property in the goods has not passed to the buyer, the
unpaid seller has in addition to his other remedies, a right of withholding
delivery similar to and co-extensive with his rights of lien where the property
has passed to the buyer as prescribed under section 39(1) as aforesaid. See Ex
parte Chalmers ( 1873) L.R. 8 Ch. App. 289 at 292. It is thus apparent that a
lien, although it may only arise stricto sensu when the property held belongs
to another, on the other hand, the Fight to withhold delivery exercised by the
unpaid seller over goods in which he still has the property, has quite rightly,
been described as a quasi-lien. See Ex parte Chalmers (supra). In the result
therefore, the unpaid seller has the same right of retention or withholding
delivery of the goods in his possession sold whether or not the Property in
them has passed to the buyer. See R v Ward Ltd. v. Bignall (1967) 1 Q.B. 534 at
545." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (Pp.59-60, Paras.B-A) - read in context
10
COMMERCIAL LAW - CREDIT SALE TRANSACTION: nature of credit
sale transaction
"In the credit sale transaction, there is a sale on
credit. The credit may take the form of payment of the entire purchase at an
agreed future time or payment of the purchase price by agreed instalments. In a
credit sale, there is no question of an agreement to purchase the goods at a
future time. A purchaser of goods under a credit sale agreement does not have
the option, which the hirer has, of returning the goods and freeing himself
from the obligation to pay further instalments. Two cases which show the nature
and illustrate the consequences of a credit sale transaction are Osei Kofi v.
Mensah [19301] 1 WACA 76 and Yakassai v. Incar Motors Nigeria Ltd. [1975] NSCC
284 both of which have been referred to by counsel in this appeal. It is
evident that a credit sale is not a hire-purchase transaction. A credit sale is
a sale transaction subject to the same principles in regard to the passing of
property in sale transactions which are not on credit." Per Ayoola, J.S.C.
(P.76, Paras.B-G) - read in context
11
COMMERCIAL LAW - HIRE-PURCHASE: nature of an hire-purchase
transaction
"In the hire-purchase transaction, there is no question
of a sale coming into being unless and until the hirer exercises at the
appropriate time the option to purchase the goods. Mixed in a hire-purchase
transaction is a contract of hire and option to purchase." Per Ayoola,
J.S.C. (P.76, Paras.A-B) - read in context
12
CONTRACT - BINDING CONTRACT BETWEEN UNPAID SELLER AND THE
BUYER: effect of a contract between an unpaid seller and the buyer, although
possession of the goods may have passed to the buyer
"it is settled law that although possession of the
goods may have passed to the buyer or his agent so as to terminate the unpaid
seller's statutory right to a lien, the contract itself between the parties, as
it is the case in the present appeal, may make express provision for or create
a special right in the seller which is analogous to a lien. Where such express
provision is agreed to by the parties, it cannot be doubted that it will be
binding on the parties." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.61, Paras.A-C) - read in
context
13
CONTRACT - WRITTEN CONTRACT: what needs to be done when
interpreting a written contract
"The law is long settled that in interpreting the
provisions of a written contract, no addition thereto or, subtraction therefrom
is permissible. The words used must be given effect to and no word should be
ignored in the interpretation of the intention of the parties, otherwise the
court will be seen as rewriting the agreement between the parties. See Bookshop
House Ltd. v. Stanley Consultant Ltd. ( 1986) NWLR (Part 26) 87 at 97."
Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.53, Paras.D-F) - read in context
14
CONTRACT - CONTRACT FOR SALE OF SPECIFIC GOODS: effect of a
contract of sale of a specific goods when made subject to a condition that
suspends the passing of the property
"where a contract for the sale of specific goods, as in
the present case, is made subject to a condition which to all intent and
purposes suspends the passing of property, the property will not pass to the
buyer at the time of the making of the contract, but only when the agreed
condition as stipulated by the parties is fufilled. Until then, the contract
takes effect as an agreement to sell, and not an outright or absolute sale of
the goods." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.55, Paras.D-F) - read in context
15
COURT - GRANT OF AWARD: whether the court has the power to
make gratuitous award
"It is not the function of a Court of Law to make a
gratuitous award. Such an award will be incompetent. PER KUTIGI, J.S.C.
(Pp.32-33, paras.G-A) - read in context
16
COURT - POWER OF THE COURT: whether the court of law has the
power to grant a relief not sought
"the principle of law is well settled that a court of
law must not grant to a party a relief which he has not sought or which is more
than he has claimed." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (Pp.69-70, Paras.G-A) - read in
context
17
EQUITABLE REMEDY - SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE: what specific
performance entails
"A decree of specific performance is a form of relief
that is purely equitable in origin and is one of the earliest examples of the
maxim that equity acts in personam. The fundamental rule is that specific
performance will not be decreed if there is an absolute remedy at law in answer
to the plaintiff's claim, that is to say, where the plaintiff would be
adequately compensated by the common law remedy of damages. See Hutton v.
Watting (1948) Ch.26 at 36 and Re Scott and Alvarez's Contract, Scott v.
Alvarez (1895) 2 Ch. 603 C.A. at 612 and 615. The jurisdiction in specific
performance is based on the inadequacy of the remedy at law. See too Whiteley
Ltd. v. Hilt (1918) 2 K.B. 808 at 819 and Re Clarke (1887) 36 Ch.D. 348 at 352.
In Flint v. Brandon (1803) 8 Ves. 159." Per Iguh, J.S.C. (P.66, Paras.A-D)
- read in context
18
WORDS AND PHRASES - "UNPAID SELLER": meaning of an
unpaid seller
"By Section 38(1) of the Act, the seller of goods is
deemed to be an "unpaid seller" within the meaning of the Act when:
(1) the whole of the price has not been paid or tendered; or (2) a bill of
exchange or other negotiable instrument has been recovered as conditional payment,
and the condition on which it was recovered has not been fulfilled by reason of
the dishonour of the instrument or otherwise as in the present case." Per
Iguh, J.S.C. (P.58, Paras.A-C) - read in context
19
WORDS AND PHRASES - LEGAL LIEN AND LIEN BY CONTRACT: meaning
of a lien and a lien by contract
"A legal lien was described in Halsbury's Laws of
England, Vol 28 (4th Edition) paragraph 702 thus: "In its primary or legal
sense, 'lien' means a right at common law in one man to retain that which is
rightfully and continuously in his possession belonging to another until the
present and accrued claims of the person in possession are satisfied. In the
primary sense, it is given by law and not by contract." Apart from lien
which the law gives, there is lien by contract which is right to detain goods
as security. In Halsbury's Law of England (4th Edition) Vol 28 paragraph 73,
the nature and formation of such lien is described thus: "Lien in its
proper sense is a right which law gives, but it is useful to speak of lien by
contract, and numerous instances of a right to detain goods as security depends
for their effect on the validity, scope and construction of the governing
contract." Per Ayoola, J.S.C. (Pp.84-85, Paras.F-C) - read in context
20
WORDS AND PHRASES - "INSOLVENCY": meaning of
'insolvency'
"Section 62(3) of the Sales of Goods Act, 1893 also
defined insolvency as following: "A person is deemed to be insolvent
within the meaning of this Act who his either ceased to pay his debts in the
ordinary course of business, or cannot pay his debts as they become due,
whether he has committed an act of bankruptcy or not." Per Wali, J.S.C.
(P.41, Paras.C-D) - read in context
KUTIGI, J.S.C. (Delivering the Leading Judgment): In the
Kaduna High Court, the plaintiff's claims against the defendant read as
follows:-
"(1) Perpetual injunction restraining the defendant,
its servant, of agents of other officers acting on its behalf from disposing of
by sale or otherwise the equipments.
(2) Damages.
(3) Specific Performance of Agreement of installation of
equipments i.e.
(a) Parker 5245/4 Crushing plant combination.
(b) Foden Model Dump Truck
(c) BD 440 Generating Set.
(d) Spare parts for crushing plant.
at the Kaduna Quarry site of the plaintiff by the defendant
or the alternative refund of all monies paid by the plaintiff to the Defendant
on the said equipments."
Pleadings were filed and exchanged between the parties and
the case proceeded to trial. At the trial, the plaintiff called two witnesses
while the defendant called only one witness. After hearing evidence from both
sides and the addresses of their counsel, the trial court adjourned for
judgment. In a considered judgment delivered on 21/7/89, the learned trial
Judge Ibiyeye J. after reviewing all the evidence before him, came to the
conclusion that the transaction between the parties was a conditional sale and
that the plaintiff had acted in violation of the conditions of sale i.e
instalmental payments. The learned trial Judge, therefore dismissed plaintiff's
claims in their entirety as lacking in merit.
On the 24th July, 1989, the defendant sold the plant or
machinery to AFCON ENGINEERING LTD, the 3rd Party herein.
Dissatisfied with the decision of the learned trial Judge,
the plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeal, holden at Kaduna.
In a reserved judgment delivered on 10/4/91, the Court of
Appeal unanimously allowed the appeal, set aside the judgment of the Kaduna
High Court and then proceeded to make the following orders in favour of the
plaintiff.
"1. A perpetual injunction restraining the defendant
whether by themselves, their servants, agents, privies or other representatives
from selling, leasing or otherwise creating any incumbrance on the equipment
subject matter of this suit.
2. That the said equipment be delivered to the plaintiff
subject to the defendant paying the entire sum outstanding as balance of the
total cost of the equipment, taking into account N381,160.00, the plaintiff had
so far paid to the defendant.
3. Order remitting the issue of general damages back to the
High Court for Assessment.
4. 3rd Party to release the equipment, if it had taken
possession of the same, forthwith.
5. N500.00 costs to the plaintiff."
Aggrieved by the decision of the Court of Appeal, the
defendant has now appealed to this court on seven grounds of appeal. It is not
necessary to reproduce them. It suffices to say that pursuant to the Rules of
Court, the parties filed and exchanged their briefs of argument which were
adopted at the hearing.
The seven issues distilled from the grounds of appeal and
submitted by the defendant for the determination of this court are as follows -
"(i) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in its view
that Ownership in the equipment passed to the plaintiff on proper construction
of Exhibit 1 merely because the defendant had delivered the equipments at the
site of the plaintiff at Kontagora.
(ii) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in its view that
acceptance of negotiable instruments as payment for the equipment had converted
the conditional sale of these equipment into an absolute sale.
(iii) Was the Court of Appeal right in its view that the
only remedy open to the defendant was an action for the recovery of the balance
of the sum unpaid and not in its exercise of the right of lien or Repossession
of the plant when the agreement between the parties provided for those
remedies?
(iv) Was the Court of Appeal right in holding that plaintiff
has established a legal right in the equipment as to entitle it to the
Equitable reliefs sought?
(v) Was the Court of Appeal right in holding that the
defendant has waived all the restrictive conditions in Exhibit 1 when the
waiver of the same as a defence was not specifically pleaded nor were
circumstances and facts amounting to waiver pleaded in answer to the
plaintiff's pleadings?
(vi) Was the Court of Appeal right in making an order to
enforce the second agreement when the respondent failed to fulfill its
obligation under the first contract?
(vii) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in making an
order that the said equipment be delivered to the plaintiff subject to the
plaintiff paying the entire sum outstanding as balance of total cost of the
equipment taking into account N381,160.00, the plaintiff has so far paid to the
defendant when such relief was not placed before the trial court."
The plaintiff on its part, submitted six issues in its brief
of argument as arising for determination thus:
"(a) Whether having regard to the pleadings and
evidence led, the defendant established any legal right to the equipment in
dispute.
(b) If so, whether such legal right could be defeated by the
"right of lien" or "right to immediate possession" clauses,
following the failure of the plaintiff to complete the payment for the
equipment.
(c) Whether the said rights of lien and "immediate
possession" have been waived by the conduct of the parties.
(d) Whether the plaintiff has by pleadings and evidence,
established the defence of waiver.
(e) Should the Court of Appeal have granted the relief that
the equipment be delivered to the plaintiff subject to the defendant being paid
the entire sum?
(f) Was the Court of Appeal right in holding that the
plaintiff had established a legal right to the equipment?"
I have examined the two sets of issues and found them to be
basically the same even though the questions raised by the plaintiff appear to
be short and succinct. I will therefore adopt the set of issues identified by
the defendant for my consideration of the appeal.
The facts of this case, which are not in dispute for the
purposes of this appeal are as set out in paragraphs 1,2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8
of the plaintiff's amended statement of claim as follows:
"(1) The plaintiff is a Limited Liability Company with
its registered office in Kaduna engaged in civil construction and other related
works.
(2) The defendant is a Limited Liability Company engaged in
the business of plant sales with its head office at Lagos and branches in major
towns in Nigeria.
(3) The plaintiff by virtue of its business, was a customer
of the defendant.
(4) The plaintiff by its L.P.O. No. 0358 of 8th February,
1978 made ordered:
(a) Parker 5245 crushing plant combination
(b) Foden Dump Truck
(c) BD 440440 KVA generating set from the defendant. The
plaintiff shall at the hearing of this suit use and rely, on its above stated
L.P.O.
(5) The plaintiff states that the total value of its order
mentioned in paragraph 4 above was as stated below:
(a) Parker 5245/4 Crushing Plant combination N476,600.00
(b) Foden Model Dump Truck N84,000.00
(c) BD 440 Generating set N66,000.00
(d) Spare parts for crushing plant N38,000.00
(e) Transportation of Equipment to Kontagora N28,000.00
(f) Commissioning Fee N10,000.00
N702.600.00
The plaintiff further states that the equipment ordered
above mentioned in paragraph (4) above was to be delivered at the plaintiff's
construction site at Kontagora by the defendant.
The plaintiff, in view of paragraph (4) above, undertook by
its letter of 28th March, 1978 to pay the defendant (the sum of N702,900.00 for
the supply of the equipments ordered and above mentioned in paragraph (5) of
the statement of claim, subject to terms and conditions stated in the said
plaintiff's letter of 28th March, 1978. The Plaintiff shall at the hearing of
this suit use and rely on its said letter of 28th March, 1978 to the Defendant.
(8) The plaintiff states that it made a down payment of
N281,160 i.e 40% of the total sum for the equipment mentioned in
paragraph (5) above wherein the defendant proceeded and installed the equipment
at the plaintiff's site at Kontagora. The plaintiff shall at the hearing of
this suit, use and rely on the defendant's letter of 29th April, 1978
acknowledging receipt of the payment aforementioned by the plaintiff".
These paragraphs of the amended statement of claim were
admitted in Paragraphs 2 and 6 of the amended statement of defence which are
set out as follows:-
"(2) The defendant admits paragraphs 1, 2, 3,4, 5, 6
and 7 of the statement of claim.
(6) The defendant admits paragraph 8 of the statement of
claim but avers that other condition of sales contained in the sales agreement
were not fulfilled by the plaintiff."
One other fact which is not in dispute in this case is that
at a stage, the defendant agreed to move the equipment from Kontagora to Kaduna
at plaintiff's request for a fee of N30,000.00 which was paid. The defendant
now took advantage of this to effect a seizure of the equipments on the ground
that the plaintiff had failed to pay tip the remaining instalments for the
equipments as provided in the sales agreement between the parties.
The plaintiff in paragraph 7 of its amended statement of
claim above had pleaded its own letter to the defendant dated 28th March, 1978 and
that it would use and rely on it: The defendant agreed with it. That was the
Sales Agreement between the parties. It was tendered and admitted as Exhibit 1
at the trial. Exhibit 1 is a two (2) paged document. I will set it out in full
thus:
"28 March 1978
Afrotec Technical Services Nig. Ltd.,
P. M. B. 1061,
Oshodi,
Lagos State.
Dear Sirs,
SUPPLY OF ITEMS OF PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
We hereby unconditionally and irrevocably undertake to pay
Afrotec Technical Services Nigeria Limited (hereinafter referred to as Afrotec
the total sum of N702,900.00 (Seven hundred and two thousand, nine hundred
Naira) in consideration of their supplying us with the under-mentioned
equipment on the following terms and conditions.
EQUIPMENT
Ex-Isolo
1 No. Parker Mobile Crushing Plant Model
5245/4'/7606 N476,000.00
1 No. Foden Quarry dump Truck Model FC27
N84,000.00
Fast moving recommended spare parts to value
N39,900.00
BD 440 440KV A Generating Set
N66,000.00
PRICES
The agreed prices are as detailed above and are understood
to be on the basis of delivery Ex Afrotec's yard at Isolo Industrial Estate.
DELIVERY
The items of plant detailed above are to be delivered to
site at an additional agreed price of N28,000.00 (Twenty-eight thousand Naira).
COMMISSIONING
Afrotec to attend to commissioning and to provide skilled
engineer to supervise installation at an additional cost of N10,000.00 (Ten
thousand Naira) being five weeks at the rate of N2,000.00 per week.
TERMS OF PAYMENT
We confirm that the total contract price of N702,900.00 is
to be paid to Afrotec on the following terms.
40% cash deposit of N281,160.00 (Two hundred and eighty-one
thousand, one hundred and sixty Naira) payable in advance of delivery.
Balance of 60% payable by six equal instalments of
N70,290.00 (Seventy thousand, two hundred and ninety Naira) each secured by
post-dated cheques payable on the 27th April, 27th May, 27th
June, 27th July, 27th August and 27th September
respectively.
INTEREST
The interest charged on the instalmental payments is to be
for Afrotec's account.
We unconditionally and irrevocably agree that Afrotec shall
have a lien on all the machinery until such time as Afrotec receive payment of
the full contract amount of N702,900.00.
We also confirm that should we fail to pay, any of the
instalments detailed above within one month of the due date, Afrotec shall take
immediate possession of those properties in specie that remain unpaid for
within the subject of this transaction without hinderance and without recourse.
Yours faithfully,
For: MIA & SONS LIMITED.
(SIGNED)
(SIGNED)
ALHAJI M. I.
ATTA
R.H.MAGGS
MANAGING
DIRECTOR.
FINANCIAL CONTROLLER"
As could be seen therefore from the pleadings and the
evidence led at the trial, the only serious issue before the learned trial
Judge and therefore the Court of Appeal was as to whether or not the defendant
had the right to seize the equipment in question. And in determining that
issue, it appears to me that the lower courts were called upon to resolve a
very narrow issue as to whether the transaction between the parties amounted to
an absolute/outright sale or a conditional sale as contended by the plaintiff
and the defendant respectively. I will proceed to consider the issues.
Issues (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv)
These issues call conveniently be treated together as they
all relate to the proper interpretation of Exhibit 1 above, and what remedies
or rights are available to the parties as a result of such an interpretation.
It was argued that since it is common ground between the parties (that the Sale
Agreement dated 28th March, 1978 (Exhibit 1) was the basis upon which the sale
was conducted, the Court of Appeal ought to have held the parties bound by its
provisions; and that it should have interpreted the agreement to identify the
intention of the parties as to whether or not the property in the goods passed
to the plaintiff on the installation of the plant in Kontagora by the
defendant. That the Court of Appeal was in serious error when it held that
under section 18(1) of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 which is a received English
statute of general application in force in England, the 1st January 1900 (see
section 28 of the High Court Law Cap. 49 Laws of Northern Nigeria 1963, Vol. 2,
hereinafter simply referred to as the Act) mere installation of the plant in
Kontagora passed the title in the plant to the plaintiff without regard to the
express intention of the parties in Exhibit 1. That section 18 of the Act deals
with unconditional sale of goods unlike in the present case where the sale is
conditional. Reference was made to section 19 of the Act and to the following
authorities:-
Buraimo v. Adeniyi (1990) 2 NWLR (Pt.133) 406
Oduye v. Nigerian Airways (1987) 2 NWLR cPt.55) 126
Niger Benue Transport Co. Ltd. v. Narumal & Sons Ltd.
(1986) 4 NWLR (Pt.33) 117
Bookshop House Ltd. v. Stanley Consultants Ltd. (1986) 3
NWLR (Pt.26) 87.
Ogbunyiya v. Okudo (1979) 6-9 SC. 32
We were also referred to specified conditions in Exhibit 1
headed "Terms of Payment" and "Interest" respectively,
which the plaintiff had failed to fulfil and which did not pass ownership to it
thus, leaving the defendant with the right to repossess the plants.
The plaintiff on the other had contended that having regard
to the pleadings and evidence, it established a legal right to the equipments
especially when the defendant had parted with possession before receiving full
payment for them. That there is no provision in the Act which makes a seller who
has parted with possession to retain title unless there is specific provision
or clause in the sale agreement to that effect. We were referred to section 17
of the Act and to the cases of:
Aluminium Industries Vassen BV v. Romalpa Aluminium Ltd.
(1976) 2 All E. R. 552.
Hendy Lennox (Industrial Engines) Ltd. v. Grahamme Puttick
Ltd. (1984) 2 ALL E. R. 152.
Yakassai v. Incar Motors (Nig.) Ltd. (1975) 1 All N.L.R.
287.
It was also contended that by parting with possession, the
right of lien and immediate possession were lost and that title passed to the
plaintiff when the contract herein was made.
As I have indicated above, the very narrow and decisive
issue to be decided in this appeal is whether the sale or transaction between
the parties amounted to an outright sale or a conditional sale.
I have reproduced above, the Sale Agreement (Exhibit 1), say
straight away that I am in no doubt whatsoever that the facts of this case show
clearly that the equipment or machinery were sold to the defendant conditionally.
The conditions being that "the defendant shall have a lien on all the
machinery until a time that the defendant received payment of the full contract
amount of N702,900.00" and that "the defendant shall take immediate
possession of the machinery within one month should the plaintiff fail to pay
any of the instalmental payment detailed in Exhibit 1". In other words, I
am of the view that the property in the equipment or machinery had never passed
to the plaintiff when the defendant effected the seizure which is the subject
matter of this action. The parties are clearly bound by the provisions in the
Sale Agreement (Exhibit 1) without any subtraction or addition.
The Court has no power to rewrite the agreement. I have
carefully perused the agreement herein and have found nothing illegal in any of
its provisions. Exhibit 1 is in fact fortified by the provisions of sections
38, 39 and 40 of the Act. They read in part:
"RIGHTS OF UNPAID SELLER AGAINST THE GOODS
Unpaid Seller defined:
Section 38(1) The seller of goods is deemed to be an
"unpaid seller" within the meaning of this Act -
(a) When the whole of the price has not been paid or
tendered;
(b) When a bill of exchange or other negotiable instrument
has been received as conditional payment, and the condition on which it was
received has not been fulfilled by reason of the dishonour of the instrument or
otherwise.
(2) Omitted.
UNPAID SELLER'S RIGHTS
Section 39 (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act and of
any statute in that behalf, notwithstanding that the property in the goods may
have passed to the buyer, the unpaid seller of goods, as such, has by
implication of law:
(a) A lien on the goods or right to retain them for the
price while he is in possession of them;
(b) Omitted
(c) Omitted
(2) Where the property in goods has not passed to the buyer,
the unpaid seller has in addition to his other remedies, a right of withholding
delivery to and co-extensive with his rights of lien
UNPAID SELLER'S LIEN
Seller's lien:
Section 41 (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the
unpaid seller of goods who is in possession of them is entitled to retain
possession of them until payment or tender of the price in the following cases,
namely:
(a) where the goods have been sold without any stipulation
as to credit;
(b) where the goods have been sold on credit, but the term
of credit has expired;
(c) where the buyer becomes insolvent.
(2) The seller may exercise his right of lien
notwithstanding that he is in possession of the goods as agent or bailee or
custodier for the buyer."
One of the facts not in dispute in this case is that the six
post-dated cheques issued by the plaintiff to the defendant in accordance with
Exhibit 1 each bounced one after the other. Twenty one other post dated cheques
for smaller amounts as replacements also were returned unpaid. And all efforts
to collect the balance of the sale price as agreed in (Exhibit 1 ) proved
abortive. There is no doubt at all that the defendant is an unpaid seller under
the Act. It was therefore acting within its rights when though acting as an
agent of the plaintiff, it seized the machinery which had lawfully come into
its possession at the relevant time. The short of it all is that the contract
of sale between the parties being conditional, the defendant was entitled to
exercise its right of lien both under the contract agreement (Exhibit 1) and
under the Act, the plaintiff having woefully failed to satisfy the conditions
of sale of paying the 60% balance of the sale price. The case of Yakassai v.
Incar Motors (Nig.) Ltd. which was relied upon by the Court of Appeal and which
was cited by learned counsel for the plaintiff will not apply here. In that
case, the Supreme Court held that the sale therein was an outright or complete
or absolute sale. In the instance case, the sale as I have found is
conditional. So also in Kofi v. Mensah (1933) I WACA 76, the West African Court
of Appeal also held that the sale therein, being in outright sale, the
purchaser was riot bound by the agreement which allowed the seller to seize the
lorry or property on failure of instalments. That I believe was as it should
have been. The agreement to seize the property when the sale was absolute or
outright, is contrary to the provisions of' the Act discussed above. The
property in the lorry vested immediately in the purchaser and the seller could
no longer take possession of it on failure by the purchaser to pay the
instalment. These two authorities do not therefore apply in this appeal where
the sale as I have already concluded is a conditional Sale. The Court in the
two cases above rightly held that in an outright sale, the seller's remedy lies
in an action to recover the balance of purchase price owed by the purchaser
only. I therefore resolve issues 1,2,3 and 4 in favour of the defendant as
follows:
(1) The Court of Appeal was wrong in its view (that
ownership in the equipment passed to the plaintiff on proper construction of
Exhibit 1.
(2) The Court of Appeal was wrong in its view that
acceptance of negotiable instruments or cheques as payment for the equipment
had converted the conditional sale into an absolute sale.
(3) The Court of Appeal was wrong in its view that the only
remedy open to the defendant was an action for the necessary of the balance of
the sum unpaid.
(4) The Court of Appeal was wrong in holding that the
plaintiff had established a legal right in the equipment as to entitle it to
equitable reliefs sought.
Issues V and VI
These relate to the findings by the Court of Appeal that
defendant had waived all the restrictive conditions in Exhibit 1 and whether or
not there was a second contract between the parties. The defendant said the
plaintiff neither pleaded waiver nor facts amounting to such waiver. The
plaintiff contended otherwise. It referred to paragraphs 9 and 23 of the
statement of claim and to Exhibit 11 a letter dated 3rd July, 1981 written by
the defendant to the plaintiff.
I have carefully examined the entire pleadings in this case.
There is nowhere in the pleadings where waiver is expressly pleaded. But did
the act of the respondents in installing the equipment after dishonour of
plaintiff's cheques (both original and replacements) and a demand for a fresh letter
of lien in its letter of 3/7/81 constitute waiver? My answer is in the
negative. I also say that there was no second or new contract between the
parties herein and none was produced.
Now, let us see what the Act has to say about loss or
termination of lien -
"TERMINATION OF LIEN
Section 43(1) - The unpaid seller of goods loses his right
of retention thereon:
(a) omitted
(b) omitted
(c) By waiver thereof
(2) omitted."
The Act thus recognised that the unpaid seller's lien may be
waived.
But it must be stressed that by proceeding to install the
machines in Kontagora after the initial dishonour of the six post-dated
cheques, the defendant was merely fulfilling the terms of agreement (Exhibit 1)
which included installation at Kontagora. Failure to install would have
amounted to a breach of the contract. Secondly the proposal to issue ten new
post-dated cheques in replacement of the original six which were also
dishonoured, was conveyed to the defendant vide plaintiff's letter MIA/ A/27
dated 25th May 1981 (See defendant's letter Exhibit 11 dated 3rd July,1981)
wherein the defendant made its own suggestion including the request for a fresh
letter of lien. It is noteworthy that the proposals in the letter under
reference came only after the defendant had repossessed the equipment/machinery
which even had taken place before 28th March, 1980 (See paragraph 21 of the
amended statement of claim). The defendant has not been shown to have waived
its lien by dealing with the machines in any manner inconsistent with the lien
or by making any new arrangement with the plaintiff which is inconsistent with
the continuance of its lien. A lien may be lost if the seller refuses to
deliver the goods on some ground other than the buyer's failure to pay or
tender the price, or on some ground other than his right of lien. That is not
the case here (see Hungmann v. Brieseman(1892) 67L.T. 642; Weeks v. Goode
(1859) 6 C.C. (N.S.) 367. Exhibit 1 being the agreement pleaded and relied upon
by the parties, all subsequent acts of the parties in fulfilment of
the agreement must be treated as such but not as giving rise to new contracts
each and every time a proposal is made on how to effect a performance by a
defaulting party. There was absolutely no need for the defendant to have asked
the plaintiff for a fresh lien when Exhibit 1 had provided for same. The
request was superflous. The fact was that the ten new cheques still bounced,
one after the other and so the defendant remained an unpaid seller. I therefore
resolve issues (V) and (VI) in favour of the defendant and hold that the Court
of Appeal erred when it held that the defendant had waived its right of lien as
contained in Exhibit 1 which is the only agreement or contract pleaded and
relied upon by the parties. I also hold that the plaintiff did not establish
any legal right in the equipment as to entitle them to any of the reliefs
claimed.
ISSUE (VII)
This issue is directed against the following order made by
the Court of Appeal-
"That the said equipment be delivered to the plaintiff
subject to the plaintiff paying the entire sum outstanding as balance of the
total cost of the equipments, taking into account N381,160.00 the plaintiff had
so far paid to the 1st respondent (defendant)"
There is no dispute about the fact that this is certainly
not one of the reliefs sought by the plaintiff against the defendant in the
trial court. The defendant also made no counter-claim in its statement of
defence before the High' Court against the plaintiff. The order made by the Court
of Appeal is therefore clearly gratuitous. It is not the function of a Court of
Law to make a gratuitous award. Such an award will be incompetent (see for
example Ekpeyong v. Nyong (1975) 2 SC.71, Obioma v. Olomu (1978) 3 S.C.1). The
issue therefore succeeds.
Having come to the conclusion as I have done above that the
plaintiff did not establish any legal right in the property or machinery
subject-matter of the contract, it automatically failed to qualify for any of
the relief's sought by, it against the defendant. The property or title in the
goods conditionally sold to the plaintiff remained perpetually in the defendant
as an unpaid seller and as contained in the Sale Agreement (Exhibit 1).
It is noteworthy to observe here now that the Act, hitherto
a received English statute of general application in Kaduna State, has since been
Nigerianised vide the Sale of Goods Edict No. 15 of 1990. This is as it should
be. All such laws should be Nigerianised as soon as possible to enable us know
what laws actually govern us without having to travel all the way to England
for the purpose!
On the whole,this appeal therefore succeeds and it is
allowed. The judgment of the Court of Appeal including its orders, are hereby
set aside. The judgment of the learned trial judge delivered on 21st July,1989
dismissing plaintiffs claims is restored. The defendant is awarded costs of
this appeal which is fixed at N10,000,00 against the plaintiff.
WALI, J.S.C.: I have read before now the lead judgment of my
learned brother Kutigi, JSC and I agree with his reasoning that the appeal has
merit and ought to succeed.
The vexed question that arises for determination in this
appeal and upon which the resolution of other issues raised depends, is Issue 1
in the appellant's brief of argument. It reads as follows:
"1. Whether the Court of Appeal was right in its view
that ownership in the equipment passed to the respondent on proper construction
of Exhibit 1, merely because the Appellant had delivered the equipment at the
site of the respondent at Kontagora."
Learned counsel for the respondent criticised the manner the
issues in the appellants' brief were framed. He in particular referred to the
grounds 1 and 3 and contended that they could not be attached to any issue in
the appellant's brief. It was also his complaint that ground 2 was split into 2
by framing 2 issues out of it to wit issues (i) & (iv) and submitted that a
ground of appeal ought to relate, to only one issue for determination. Learned
counsel further complained that Issues (iii) and (vi) were not based on or
related to any ground of appeal.
I have examined the issues framed by the appellant as
related to the grounds of appeal and have arrived at the conclusion that the
only issue that could not be hinged to any ground of appeal is issue (vi), and
for that reason it is hereby struck out. On the question relating to
formulating two issues from a single ground viz issues (i) and (iv) arising
from ground 2, it is not against the procedure relating to briefs of argument
that one or more issues are formulated out of a ground of appeal, but I agree that
it is inelegant to do so and it may at times be incomprehensible and confusing.
The purpose of filing a brief is to state with accuracy, brevity and precision
whatever is essential to clear and adequate understanding of the questions
which are required to be considered by the Court. Ground 1 is in my view
covered by Issue (i) ground 3 by issue (ii) and ground 4 by issue (iii) of the
appellant's brief.
From the pleadings and evidence lead in this case, both oral
and documentary, the parties entered into agreement for the sale of specific
goods and the conditions attached to such contract. These are contained in
Exhibit 1 dated 28th March, 1978. It is a short document and for the purpose of
clarity and convenience, Exhibit 1 is reproduced hereunder
"Afrotec Technical Services Nig. Ltd.
P.M.B. 1061,
Oshodi,
Lagos State.
Dear Sirs,
SUPPLY OF ITEMS OF PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
We hereby unconditionally and irrevocably undertake to pay
Afrotec Technical Services Nigeria Limited (hereinafter referred to as Afrotec)
the total sum of N702,900.00 (seven hundred and two thousand, nine hundred
Naira) in consideration of their supplying us with the under-mentioned
equipment on. The following terms and conditions -
Equipment
N Ex - Isolo
1 No. Parker Mobile Crushing Plant Model
5245/4/7606 476,000
1 No. Foden Quarry. Dump Truck Model
FC27 84,000.00
Fast moving recommended spare parts to value
-
38,900.00
BD 440 KVA Generating
Set 66,000.00
PRICES
The agreed prices are as detailed above and are understood
to be on the basis of delivery Ex. Afrotec's yard at Isolo Industrial Estate.
DELIVERY
The items of plant detailed above are to be delivered to
site at an additional agreed price of N28,000.00 (twenty-eight thousand,
Naira).
COMMISSIONING
Afrotec to attend to commissioning and to provide skilled
engineer to supervise an additional cost of N10,000.00(Ten thousand Naira).
being five weeks at the rate of N2,000.00 per week.
Terms of payment
We confirm that the total contract price of N9702,900.00 is
to be paid to Afrotec on the following terms. 40% cash deposit of N281,160.00
(Two hundred and eighty-one thousand, one hundred and sixty Naira) payable in
advance of delivery.
Balance or 60% payable by. six equal instalments or
N70,290.00 (Seventy thousand, two hundred and ninety Naira) each secured by
post-dated cheques payable on the 27th April, 27th May, 27th June, 27th July,
27th August and 27th September respectively.
INTEREST
'The interest charge on the instamental payments is to be
for Afrotec's account. We unconditionally arid irrevocably agree that Afrotec
shall have a lien on all the machinery. until such time as Afrotec receive
payment of the full contract amount of N702,900.00 We also confirm that should
we fail to pay any of the instalments detailed above within one month of the
due date, Afrotec shall take immediate possession of those properties in specie
that remains unpaid for within the subject of this transaction without
hindrance and without recourse.
Yours faithfully.
For: MIA & SONS LIMITED
ALHAJI M. I.
ATTA
R.H.MAGGS
Managing
Director
Financial Controller. "
Following this agreement, the appellant delivered the plant
and accompanying equipment at the agreed site in Kontagora Town, Niger State
and installed them. Before the delivery and installation of the plant and
equipment, the respondent paid 40% of the contract price to wit N281,166.00 and
the balance of N428,860.00 to be paid by six equal instalments of N70,290.00
each secured by post-dated cheque payable on 27th April, 27th May, 27th June,
27th July, 27th August and 27th September, 1978 respectively.
The following stipulations were specifically provided in
Exhibit I :
"1. The interest charged on the instalmental payments
is to be for Afrotec's account.
2. We unconditionally and irrevocably agree that Afrotec
shall have a lien on all the machinery until such time as Afrotec receive
payment of the full contract amount of N702,900.00.
3. We also confirm that should we fail to pay any of the
instalments detailed above within one month of the due date, Afrotec shall take
immediate possession of those properties in specie that remains unpaid for
within the subject of this transaction without hindrance and without recourse.
(italics provided for emphasis)
The object of sale of goods is generally to transfer its
ownership to the purchaser from the seller. See sections 16-19 of the Sale of
Goods Act, 1893. But where a contrary intention is shown, the property in the
goods only passes to the buyer at such time as the parties to the contract
intend to. And for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties,
regard must be had to the terms of the contract the conduct of the parties and
the circumstances of the case. In R. v. Ward Ltd. v. Bignall (1967) 2All ER 449
at453; (1967) QB 534CA,Diplock L.J. stated:
" in modem times, very little is needed to give rise to
the inference that property in specific goods is to pass only on delivery or
payment."
Having regard to the contents of Exhibit 1 and the conduct
of the parties in this case, can it be concluded that the ownership of the
specific goods sold and delivered passed to the respondent?
The respondent agreed in Exhibit 1 unconditionally and
irrevocably that Afrotec shall have a lien on all the machinery sold and
delivered under that contract, until such time as Afrotec receives payment of
the full contract amount of N702,900.00. It was agreed by the parties in
Exhibit 1 that should the respondent fail to pay any of the instalments
detailed in Exhibit 1 within one month of due date, the appellant, Afrotec
shall take immediate possession of those properties in specie that remain
unpaid without hindrance and without recourse. This shows that the passing of
the property to the respondent is conditional to the payment in full of the
contract price as agreed in Exhibit 1.
Perusing through the documents tendered and admitted in the
course of trial, there was an attempt by the parties to re-schedule the payment
of the outstanding debts which was never concluded after default by the
respondent. The respondent made a proposal to the appellant in that regard
which the latter replied by a counterproposal. A counter-offer by the offeree
operates as a rejection of the original offer thus, terminating it. So, it is
futile for the respondent to claim that Exhibit 1 had been replaced or altered
by another agreement which he called novation. The conditions in Exhibit 1 were
still binding and enforceable at the time of litigation.
There was no waiver by the appellant of his right of lien
over the equipment sold and delivered to the respondent's site in Kontagora.
The delay by the appellant in exercising the rights given him in Exhibit 1 was
only to give the parties more time and opportunity to reach amicable settlement
which the respondent failed to avail himself by resorting to unfulfilled
promises and hollow under-taking before he resorted to litigation.
With consent and tacit approval of the respondent, the
appellant regained possession of the equipment that is, when he was to remove
them from Kontagora to Kaduna for servicing and relocation to another site in
Kaduna. It was then he decided to hold on to them in exercise of his lien for
the unpaid debt. The appellant was more or less at that time like the
respondent's agent. See section 41(2) of the Sale of Goods Acts. 1893 and Grice
v. Richardson (1877) 3 App. Cas. 319.
Section 41(1) of the Sale of Goods Act, 1893 provides as
follows:
"Subject to the provisions of this Act, the unpaid
seller of goods who is in possession of them is entitled to retain possession
of them until payment or tender of the price in the following cases, namely,
[a] When the goods have been sold without any stipulation as
to credit;
[b] Where the goods have been sold on credit, but the term
of credit has expired;
[c] Where the buyer becomes insolvent."
Paragraphs (b) and (c) could apply in the present case,
because-
"(i) the appellant was an unpaid seller;
(ii) the stipulated period of credit had expired;
[iii] the buyer (who is the respondent) had become
insolvent; and
(iv) the seller was in possession of the goods or part of
them."
Section 62(3) of the Sales of Goods Act, 1893 also defined
insolvency as following:
"A person is deemed to be insolvent within the meaning
of this Act who his either ceased to pay his debts in the ordinary course of
business, or cannot pay his debts as they become due, whether he has committed
an act of bankruptcy or not"
See the Feliciana (1915) 59 CJ 456; R v. Saddlers Co. (1863)
10 H.L. 404, 425; Parker v. Gossage (1835)2CM & R617, 620 and Biddle Combe
v. Bond [1835) 4A & E 332, 337. The respondent was unable to pay his debts
when they became due and was therefore Insolvent.
By virtue of the provision of section 39 of the Act the
powers granted to the unpaid seller under Part (iv) thereof, can be exercised
by him "notwithstanding that the property in the goods may have passed to
the buyer". See also section 41[2] of the Act that also provides that the
seller - "may exercise his right of lien not withstanding that, he is in
possession of the goods as agent or bailee for the buyer". See Grice v.
Richardson [1873 3 App. Cas 319.
It is implicit in section 28 of the Act that delivery of the
goods is conditional on payment and where payment is not forthcoming or if the
buyer becomes insolvent, the seller is entitled to retain the goods even during
the currency of a period of credit. See Bloxam v. Sanders (1825) 4 B & C
941 at 949.
Subsequent to the judgment of the trial court in which the
respondent as plaintiff lost to the appellant as defendant resulting in the
dismissal of the action filed. The respondent brought an application for
injunction to stay the implementation of the judgment pending appeal.
Parties filed affidavits and counter-affidavits and made
oral submissions when the application was heard. In a considered ruling, the
learned trial Judge refused the application and concluded:
"In sum, the applicant has failed to establish that the
res it seeks to preserve is still in existence or in the possession of the
respondent. This court shall not therefore exercise its discretionary power in
vain."
The learned trial Judge found that before filing the
litigation by the respondent, due warning by the appellant to the respondent
that in exercise of their right of lien on the equipment in their possession
they intend to dispose of same by sale to satisfy the debt or part thereof and
as a result of which the said equipment were thereafter sold and delivered to
Messrs Afcon Engineering Co. Ltd. Section 48(2) & (3), confers on the
unpaid seller the right to sell goods in his possession in exercise of his lien
over the same in order to satisfy his debt or part thereof. It provides thus:
"48[2] Where an unpaid seller who has exercised his
right of lien or retention or stoppage in transit sells the good, the buyer
acquires a good title thereto as against original buyer.
(3) Where the unpaid seller gives notice to the buyer of his
intention to re-sell and the buyer does not within a reasonable time pay, or
tender the price. The unpaid seller may re-sell the goods and recover from the
original buyer damages for any loss occasioned by his breach of contract.
An unpaid seller can exercise the statutory right of resale
of the Goods in his possession whether or not properly, the goods has passed to
the buyer or not and the new buyer acquires good title in such goods. See R. v.
Ward v. Bignall (1967) Q.B. 543; (1967) (1967) 2 All 449."
Under section 48 of the Sales of Goods Act, the unpaid
seller retains the right to sell the identified property, where the buyer has
become insolvent. The right of sale can be exercised by the seller under this
section where he has been in continuous possession of the goods or where he has
regained possession by exercising his right of lien or stoppage of the goods in
transit. This right is available to him whether or not the property in the
goods has passed to the original buyer who has become insolvent by his failure
to pay or tender the purchase price as agreed in the contract, within a
reasonable time. The intention to sell the goods must be notified to the
insolvent buyer. What is a reasonable time in this context is a question of
fact. See Darnhouwer & Co. Ltd. v. Christian (1917) KB 37. In that case, it
was agreed by the parties that payment was to be made within 90 days of the
arrival of the goods. Over 90 days of the arrival of the goods, the purchaser
did not pay for the goods or take delivery of the same. The seller gave three
days notice to the expiry of which he sold the goods. It was held that the
three days notice is reasonable having regard to all the surrounding
circumstances of the case. The re-sale of the goods rescinded the original
contract and the property in the goods I reverted in the unpaid seller which
had previously passed to the original buyer. This act of resale rescinded the
original contract, thus reverting the property in the goods to the seller who
passed good title in them to the new buyer.
The Court of Appeal was therefore wrong in its conclusion
that:
"I have considered all the relevant issues above and it
is my judgment that this appeal must succeed and it is allowed. I hereby set
aside the judgment of Ibiyeye, J. delivered on 21(7)89.
I also agree that the third party, Afcon Engineering
Company, Ltd. did not obtain any title in the equipment in dispute which the
1st respondent allegedly sold to it. The 1st respondent had no proprietory
rights over the equipment when it sold and delivered it to the 2nd respondent.
After parting with the property in the goods, the Company had no right to pass
over to the 2nd respondent. It is also quite plain that the 2nd respondent
bought the equipment with the knowledge of this suit and that in itself, will
disqualify it from obtaining any property in the equipment. The 2nd respondent
is hereby ordered to release the equipment, if it had taken possession of the
same, forthwith."
It is for these and other reasons ably stated in the
judgment of my learned brother Kutigi, JSC which have already expressed my
agreement with, that I also hereby allow this appeal set aside the judgment and
orders of the Court of Appeal and restore the judgment of the trial Court. I
award N10,000.00 costs to the appellant against the respondent.
IGUH, J.S.C.: I have had the privilege of reading in draft,
the judgment just delivered by my learned brother, Kutigi, J.S.C. and I am in
full agreement with him that there is merit in this appeal and that the same
should be allowed.
It is not in dispute that the transaction in issue is a
contract of sale between the appellant and the 1st respondent in respect of the
appellant's Parker Crushing Plant with its auxiliary equipment, that is to say:
1. Parker 5245/4 Crushing Plant Combination value
at N476,000.00
2. Foden Quarry Dump Truck Model
FC27
N84,000.00
3. BD440 Generating
set. N66,000.00
4. Spare
parts
N38,900.00
Transportation of the plant by the appellant to the 1st
respondent's site at Kontagora together with the agreed fees for the
commissioning of the equipment were assessed and fixed at N38,000.00, thus
bringing the total contract price of the sale to N702,900.00. The contract
which is in writing was duly executed by the appellant and was tendered in
evidence at the hearing as Exhibit 1.
Pursuant to the terms of Exhibit 1 dated 28th March, 1978,
the 1st respondent, as the purchaser, "unconditionally and irrevocably
undertook to pay to the appellant, as the seller, the said total sum of
N702,900.00 as consideration for the sale and delivery of the plant to the 1st
respondent's site at Kontagora. The precise terms of payment were expressly
stipulated by the parties as follows:
"1. 40% cash deposit of N281,160.00 (Two hundred and
eighty-one thousand, one hundred and sixty Naira) payable in advance of
delivery.
2. Balance of 60% payable by six equal instalments of
N70,290.00 (Seventy thousand, two hundred and ninety Naira) each secured by
post-dated cheques payable on the 27th April, 27th May, 27th June, 27th July,
27th August and 27th September respectively."
The parties further agreed that the appellant would have a
right of lien on all the machinery until such time as the contract amount was
fully paid. The 1st respondent finally bound itself to the appellant as
follows:
"We also confirm that should we fail to pay any of the
instalments detailed above within one month of the due date, Afrotec shall take
immediate possession of those properties in specie that remained unpaid for
within the subject of this transaction without hindrance and without
recourse."
On receipt of the payment of N281,160.00 and the post-dated
cheques, the appellant proceeded to install and commission the equipment with
its accessories at the Kontagora quarry site of the 1st respondent.
Regrettably, however all the 1st respondent's post-dated cheques on presentation
for payment by the appellant on their respective due dates were dishonoured and
returned unpaid. Another set of post-dated cheques issued by the 1st respondent
to the appellant in replacement of the bounced cheques were themselves again
dishonoured and returned unpaid. All efforts by the appellant to collect the
unpaid balance of the contract price of the said plant and equipment from the
1st respondent proved abortive. Following the 1st respondent's request for the
dismantling, transportation and re-installation of the plant at its new site at
Kaduna, the appellant proceeded to Kontagora, dismantled the plant but
transported the same to the appellant's warehouse in Kaduna. This, it did in
exercise of its right to retake immediate possession of the property in issue
as provided for in Exhibit 1.The appellant again demanded the unpaid balance of
the purchase price of the equipment from the 1st respondent. After the failure
by the 1st respondent to meet a revised payment proposal agreed to by the parties,
the appellant resolved to exercise its right of lien and/or retention over the
plant and to sell the same and refund the 1st respondent's deposit.
Accordingly, the appellant addressed the letter, Exhibit 14
to the 1st respondent affecting it with notice of its intention to dispose of,
by sale, the crushing equipment in issue. It was after the receipt of this
notice that the 1st respondent instituted this action claiming against the
appellant as follows:
"(i) Perpetual injunction restraining the defendant,
its agents, servants or other officers acting on its behalf from disposing of
by sale or otherwise the equipment.
(ii) Damages.
(iii) Specific performance of agreement of installation of
equipments i.e.
(a) Parker 5245/4 crushing plant combination
(b) Folden Model Dump Truck
(c) BD 440 Generating Set F
(d) Spare parts for crushing plant at Kaduna quarry site of
the plaintiff by defendant or, in the alternative, refund of all monies paid by
the plaintiff to the defendant on the said equipment."
The learned trial Judge, Ibiyeye, J., as he then was, at the
conclusion of hearing held that the appellant's action was in the exercise of
its right of lien and/or its right to withhold the subject matter of the sale
until full payment of the contract price.
He accordingly dismissed all the 1st respondent's claims in
their entirety. Aggrieved by this decision of the High Court, the 1st
respondent appealed to the Court of Appeal, Kaduna Division, which court in a
unanimous decision allowed the appeal, set aside the judgment and orders of the
trial court and proceeded to order as follows:
(i) Perpetual Injunction restraining the appellant, its
servant and/or agents from disposing of by sale or otherwise the equipment in
Issue.
(ii) Specific performance of the contract of sale and
delivery of the equipment by the appellant to the 1st respondent subject to
payment of the outstanding balance of the contract price by the said 1st
respondent.
(iii) An order remitting the issue of general damages claimed
to the trial High Court for assessment.
The appellant being dissatisfied with this judgment of the
Court of Appeal has now appealed to this court.
There can be no doubt that having regard to the pleadings
and the evidence before the court together with the various legal questions
that were canvassed by learned counsel for the parties, a number of issues
would appear to arise for determination in this appeal. I propose to examine by
way of emphasis only, some of these issues as framed by the parties. These
comprise of:
(i) Whether the Court of Appeal was not in error by holding
that property in the plant with its accessories had passed to the 1st
respondent by virtue of the contract, Exhibit 1, merely because the appellant
had delivered the equipment at the site of the 1st respondent at Kontagora.
(ii) Whether the Court of Appeal was not in error when it
held that the only remedy open to the appellant was an action for the recovery
of the unpaid balance of the contract sum and not in its exercise of the right
of lien and/or immediate possession of the plant as provided for in the
agreement between the parties.
(iii) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in its view that
acceptance of negotiable instruments as payment for the plant had converted the
conditional sale thereof into an absolute sale.
(iv) Whether the Court of Appeal was not in error to have
field that the 1st respondent had established a legal right in the equipments
as to entitle it to the equitable reliefs sought.
(v) Whether the 1st respondent by its pleadings and evidence
establish the defence of waiver.
(vi) Whether the Court of Appeal was not in error making an
order that the said plant/equipment be delivered to the 1st respondent subject
to payment of the outstanding balance of the contract price by the 1st
respondent to the appellant.
I will now consider these issues. I will take issue 1 first.
Issue 1 poses the question whether the Court of Appeal was not in error by
holding that property in the plant had passed to the 1st respondent under
Exhibit 1 merely because the appellant did deliver the same at the site of the
1st respondent at Kontagora. As I have already pointed out, it is not in
dispute that the transaction in issue is a contract of-sale which under section
1 of the Sale of Goods Act,1893, is a contract whereby the seller transfers or
agrees to transfer property in goods to the buyer for a money consideration
called the price. See Doak v. Bedford (1964) 2 Q.B. 587.
Under section 1 (2) of the Sale of Goods Act, 1893,
hereinafter also referred to as the Act, a contract of sale may be conditional
or absolute. It, ought to be stressed from the onset, however, that a contract
of sale reduced into writing, such as Exhibit 1, must be construed and given
effect to like any other written contract. See Coddington v. Paleologo ( 1867)
L.R. 2 Exch. 193 at 200. So, where any right, duty or liability would arise
under a contract of sale by implication of law, such right, duty or liability
may be negatived or varied inter alia by the express agreement of the parties.
It is principally the intention of the parties, as shown by the terms of the
contract, amongst other considerations, which determines the time when the
property in the goods, the subject matter of a contract of sale, is transferred
or passes to the buyer. Accordingly, section 17(1) of the Act provides that
where there is a contract for the sale of specific goods, the property in them
is transferred to the buyer at such time as the parties thereto intend it to
pass. No difficulty can therefore arise where the contract between the parties
expressly states when or at what time the property in such goods passes to the
buyer.
Section 17(2) of the Act, however, provides that for the
purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties, regard must be had to the
terms of the contract, the conduct of the parties, and the circumstances of the
case. See Nanka-Bruce v. Commonwealth Trust Ltd. (1926) A.C. 77. It should be
pointed out that section 18 of the same Act lays down three rules which govern
the contract. These rules, however, are mere presumptions and the
law does permit parties to a contract to settle the point for themselves by any
intelligible expression of their intention. See Mc Entire v. Crossley Bros.
Ltd. (1895) A.C. 457 at 467. The said rules do not, however, apply, to the
facts of the present case and need not be given any consideration in this
judgment.
In dealing with the question whether property in the goods
in issue had passed from the appellant to the 1st respondent, the learned trial
Judge observed as follows:
"It is also apparent that by virtue of the default in
the said three equipment has not passed to the plaintiff. It therefore has not
established any legal right for which any, equitable remedy could be ordered. I
therefore failed to see any basis for ordering perpetual injunction or any
injunction or ordering specific performance of the contract covered by exhibit
I."
The Court of Appeal, for its own part, was of the view that
in so far as the appellant had delivered the plant and equipment at the 1st
respondent's Kontagora site, property in the said goods had passed to the 1st respondent.
I think the question of the property in goods must be
distinguished from the possession of them. In particular, it needs be
emphasized that property in the goods does not connote possession of such
goods. The property in the goods may be transferred to the buyer before or
after he has taken possession of them or, indeed. at the time the goods are
delivered to him. In the present case, it is common ground that the contract of
sale which is binding on the parties and governs the transaction in issue is
Exhibit 1.The question which must now be asked is whether from a close
interpretation of Exhibit 1, one can come to a definite conclusion that the
intention of the parties was that the property in the goods passed to the 1st
respondent on the installation of the plant at its Kontagora site.
The law is long settled that in interpreting the provisions
of a written contract, no addition thereto or, subtraction therefrom is
permissible. The words used must be given effect to and no word should be ignored
in the interpretation of the intention of the parties, otherwise the court will
be seen as rewriting the agreement between the parties. See Bookshop House Ltd.
v. Stanley Consultant Ltd. ( 1986) NWLR (Part 26) 87 at 97. I will now examine
closely the specific conditions under which the transaction was entered into.
Although the contract, Exhibit 1, admittedly stated that the
plant and equipment were to be delivered by the appellant at the Kontagora site
of the 1st respondent, it carefully made provisions as to how the price of the
equipment were to be paid by the 1st respondent. This was by payment of 40%
cash deposit and the liquidation of the balance by six equal instalments of
N70,290.OO. Each of these instalments was secured by a post-dated cheque payable
on the 27th day of every month, beginning with the 27th day of April, 1978 and
terminating on the 27th day of September, 1978. In particular, the parties
expressly stated thus:
(i) That the 1st respondent unconditionally and irrevocably
agreed that the appellant shall have a lien on all the machinery until such
time as the appellant received payment of the full contract price of N702.900.
00.
(ii) That should the said 1st respondent fail to pay any of
the instalments within one month of the due date, the appellant shall take
immediate possession of those goods that remained unpaid for without hindrance.
It is clear to me, from a close examination of the above
terms, particularly the powers conferred on the appellant under item (ii) above
that the transaction in issue was clearly not an absolute sale but a
conditional contract of sale. In my view, it is,as the intention of the parties
under its terms that the transfer of the property in the goods was subject to
the fulfilment by the 1st respondent of the full terms and expressed conditions
of the agreement. This must be so as it was expressly agreed to by the parties
that the appellant shall take immediate possession of the goods without
hinderance, the 1st respondent's failure to comply fully with the conditions of
the transaction.
In this regard, reference must be made to section 1
sub-sections (2), (3) and (4) of the Sale of Goods Act, 1893 which stipulates
as follows:
"(1) ............................
(2) A contract of sale may be absolute or conditional.
(3) Where under a contract of sale the property in the goods
is transferred from the seller to the buyer, the contract is called a sale, but
where the transfer of the property in the goods is to take place at a future
time or subject to some conditions thereafter to be fulfilled the contract, it
is called an agreement to sell.
(4) An agreement to sell becomes a sale when the time
elapses or the conditions are fulfilled subject to which the property in the
goods is to be transferred."
Accordingly, where a contract for the sale of specific
goods, as in the present case, is made subject to a condition which to all
intent and purposes suspends the passing of property, the property will not
pass to the buyer at the time of the making of the contract, but only when the
agreed condition as stipulated by the parties is fufilled. Until then, the
contract takes effect as an agreement to sell, and not an outright or absolute
sale of the goods.
In the present case, all the post-dated cheques meant to clear
the 60% of the purchase price spread over six months were dishonoured on
presentation for payment. Other additional cheques issued by the 1st respondent
in respect of these payments were also dishonoured and returned unpaid on
presentation. I think the court below was in error to have held that property
in the goods passed to the 1st respondent simply because the appellant, as
contracted in Exhibit 1, had delivered the equipment at the Kontagora site of
the 1st respondent. It is my view that had that court properly construed
Exhibit 1 as a whole, it would have come to the irresistible conclusion that
the transaction in issue was not an absolute sale but a conditional contract of
sale and that the property in the goods could not have passed to the 1st respondent
as the agreed conditions and stipulations governing the contract of sale had
not been fulfilled by the 1st respondent. Issue one must therefore be resolved
in favour of the appellant.
I must, however, hasten to point out that my resolution of
issue 1 in favour of the appellant cannot be regarded as any matter of great
moment in this appeal. This is because the ultimate decision I intend to reach
in this appeal would appear to be the same, whether or not property in the
goods in issue and passed to the 1st respondent under and by virtue of Exhibit
1. For the moment, I will proceed to examine issue 2.
Issue 2 concerns the right of lien, retention of possession
or withholding delivery of the goods, the subject matter of the contract of
sale. The question is whether the exercise of these rights was open to the
appellant or whether the only remedy open to it was an action for the recovery
of the balance of the unpaid contract sum.
A lien, broadly speaking, is a right to retain that which is
in one's possession belonging to another till certain demands of the person in
possession are satisfied. The unpaid seller's lien however, is his entitlement
to retain the goods in his possession until the buyer has paid or tendered the
whole of their price. See Martindale v. Smith (1841) 1 Q.B. 389 at 396. The
point that must be emphasized is that the unpaid seller's right of lien depends
on his being in possession of the goods at the time he exercises his right of
lien. Even where the seller is in possession of the goods as agent or bailee
for the buyer, as it is the case in the present appeal, he may still exercise
right of lien. See Poulton and Son v. Anglo-American Oil Co. Ltd. (1911) 27
T.L.R. 216.
Lien arises if the following conditions are satisfied,
namely:
1. The seller is unpaid;
2. The goods have been sold without any stipulation as to
credit, or the stipulated period of credit has expired, or the buyer has become
insolvent; and
3. The seller is in possession of the goods or part of them.
Accordingly, section 41 (1) of the Sale of Goods Act
provides that subject to the provisions of the Act, the unpaid seller of goods
who is in possession of them is entitled to a lien over the goods and therefore
to retain possession of them until payment or tender of the price.
By Section 38(1) of the Act, the seller of goods is deemed
to be an "unpaid seller" within the meaning of the Act when:
(1) the whole of the price has not been paid or tendered; or
(2) a bill of exchange or other negotiable instrument has
been recovered as conditional payment, and the condition on which it was
recovered has not been fulfilled by reason of the dishonour of the instrument
or otherwise as in the present case.
Perhaps, it ought to be mentioned that where an unpaid
seller who is in possession of the goods has exercised his right of lien or
retention resells the goods pursuant to his powers under the Act, the buyer
acquires a good title thereto as against the original buyer. See section 48(2)
of the Sale of Goods Act, 1893 which provides thus:
"where an unpaid seller who has exercised his right of
lien or retention or stoppage in transitu resells the goods, the buyer acquires
a good title thereto as against the original buyer"
Under this sub-section therefore, the 2nd buyer acquires a
good title to the goods as against the original buyer and it would not matter
that the unpaid seller at the time of the sale was not the owner of the goods.
See The Bineta 1967) 1 W.L.R. 121. See too Section 39(1) of the Sale of Goods
Act, 1893, wherein, it is expressly provided that subject to the provisions of
the Act and notwithstanding that the property in the goods may have passed to
the buyer, the unpaid seller of goods has inter alia and by implication of law,
a lien over the goods or the right to retain them for the price while he is in
possession of them. Such unpaid seller is not liable in conversion as the
original buyer, being in default, is not entitled to possession of the goods.
See Lord v. Price (1874) L. R. 9 Ex 54.
There is also the provision of section 39(1)(c) which,
subject to the provisions of the Act and notwithstanding that the property in
the goods may have passed to the buyer, confers on the unpaid seller, a right
of resale of the goods but as limited by the Act. And by section 39(2) of the
Act, even where the property in the goods has not passed to the buyer, the
unpaid seller has in addition to his other remedies, a right of withholding
delivery similar to and co-extensive with his rights of lien where the property
has passed to the buyer as prescribed under section 39(1) as aforesaid. See Ex
parte Chalmers ( 1873) L.R. 8 Ch. App. 289 at 292. It is thus apparent that a
lien, although it may only arise stricto sensu when the property held belongs
to another, on the other hand, the Fight to withhold delivery exercised by the
unpaid seller over goods in which he still has the property, has quite rightly,
been described as a quasi-lien. See Ex parte Chalmers (supra).
In the result therefore, the unpaid seller has the same
right of retention or withholding delivery of the goods in his possession sold
whether or not the Property in them has passed to the buyer. See R v Ward Ltd.
v. Bignall (1967) 1 Q.B. 534 at 545.
Applying the above principle of law to the facts of the
present case, it is clear to me that whether or not the property in the goods
had passed to the 1st, respondent on the deli very of the plant and equipment
at its Kontagora site, the appellant, once the goods wftre in its possession,
would only be liable to deliver them to the 1st respondent on payment or tender
of the balance of' the purchase price. See section 28 of the Sale of Goods Act,
1893). The appellant was entitled until then to retain possession of the goods.
the subject matter of the contract of sale, either by virtue of its lien as an
unpaid seller, if the property had passed (See section 39(1)) of the Sale of
Goods Act, 1893, and 1 do not so hold, or by virtue of his right to withhold
delivery of the goods, if the property had not passed (See section 39(2) of the
Act).
In either case, the appellant, as an unpaid seller had a
right to resell the goods as it appears it did. See too Ward Ltd. v. Bignall
(supra) Per Diplock, L.J. I think the appellant was entitled in all the
circumstances of this case to exercise its right of lien and/or retention of
possession of the goods in issue as provided both under the Act and pursuant to
the terms of Exhibit 1.
It was then submitted by learned counsel for the 1st
respondent that the appellant lost its right of lien over the goods the moment
possession of them was first obtained by the 1st respondent by delivery at its
Kontagora site. Without doubt, section 43(1) of the Sale of Goods Act,1893
provides that the unpaid seller of goods loses his right of lien or right of retention
when, inter alia, the buyer or his agent lawfully obtains possession of the
goods. But it is settled law that although possession of the goods may have
passed to the buyer or his agent so as to terminate the unpaid seller's
statutory right to a lien, the contract itself between the parties, as it is
the case in the present appeal, may make express provision for or create a
special right in the seller which is analogous to a lien. Where such express
provision is agreed to by the parties, it cannot be doubted that it will be
binding on the parties.
In this connection, it ought to be stressed that rights
which have been conferred on sellers or buyers under the Sale of Goods Act,
1893 are rights that arise under the contract between the parties by the
implication of law. Section 55 of that Act, however, provides that where any
right, duty or liability would arise under a contract of sale of goods by
implication of law, it may be negatived or varied inter alia by express
agreement between the parties. Accordingly, if the contract between the parties
expressly creates a lien, a right of retention of the goods, repossession
thereof or other form of security for the price, such express terms will
prevail over, and therefore exclude the statutory implication of a lien etc.,
at least to the extent of any inconsistency with the express terms. See Re
Leith's Estate (1866) L.R. 1 P.C. 296 at 307 and 308. This is because parties
to a contract enjoy their freedom to contract on their own terms so long as
these are not illegal and/or unlawful. The terms of a contract between parties
are therefore clothed with some degree of sanctity and if any question should
arise with regard to the contract, the terms in any document which constitutes
the contract are invariably the guide to its interpretation. When parties enter
into a contract, they are bound by the terms of that contract and it cannot be
anything but unfair to read into such a contract, the terms on which there has
been no agreement save terms which may arise by implication of law and in
respect of which there is nothing in the contract that expressly provides
otherwise. See Alhaji Abdullahi Baba v. Nigerian Civil Aviation Training
Centre, Zaria (1991) 5 NWLR(PI92) 388 at 392 and 393.
Exhibit 1 makes express provisions for the rights of lien
and immediate possession of the goods in issue reserved to the appellant as
terms of security for the contract price. It seems to me that even if the goods
were at all material times in the possession of the 1st respondent, there was
clearly by express agreement, reserved to the appellant as the seller, and as
between itself and the 1st respondent, the buyer, a special property or
interest in the plant and/or equipment until the full price was paid. This
price was never fully paid and I entertain no doubt that the appellant rightly
exercised its rights over the goods as agreed to by the parties in Exhibit
1.See Benjamin's Sale of Goods, 1974 Edition, paras. 1071) and 1083.
Finally, on issue 2, is the finding of the Court of Appeal
that the only remedy open to the appellant was an action for the recovery of
the unpaid balance of the contract sum and not in its exercise of the right of
lien and/or possession/retention of the goods in the first place and as I have
repeatedly, pointed out, the contract Exhibit 1 confers the exercise of the
rights of lien and/or possession of the goods on the appellant as security for
the price of the plant and equipment. This is quite apart from its rights over
the goods under the provisions of the Sale of Goods Act, 1893. In the second
place, the appellant's right to be paid the contract price of the goods is
under the law, quite independent of the existence of a lien; a lien being an
additional security given to the seller who has yet to be paid, but he has a
right to be paid besides, and independently of his lien. See The Elder (1893)
P.119 at 13 1. It is thus settled that the right of the seller to sue for the
price of the goods is independent of his other remedies against the goods.
Indeed, under section 43(2) of the Sale of Goods Act, 1893, the seller does not
loose his right to lien merely because he has obtained judgment for the price
of the goods unless and until the buyer has fully satisfied the judgment debt
by payment of the full contract price to the seller. The Court of Appeal, with
respect, was therefore in error when it held that the only remedy open to the
appellant was an action for the recovery of the balance of the price of the
goods and not in its exercise of the right of lien or retention of the plant
pursuant to the terms of Exhibit I.
There is next issue 3 which poses the question whether the
court below was right when it held that acceptance of negotiable instruments as
payment for the plant per se converted the conditional sale of the equipment to
an absolute or outright sale. In this regard, it must be conceded that where a
negotiable instrument is given by a debtor to his creditor, the question of
upon what terms it is given is clearly one of fact depending on the intention of
the parties. See Palmer v. Bramley (1895) 2 Q.B. 405 and Gunn v. Bolckow,
Vaughan and Co. (1874-1875) L.R. 10 Ch. App. 491 at 501. It must however be
added that the intention to take an instrument in absolute payment for goods
sold must be clearly shown and not deduced from ambiguous expressions.
There can be no doubt that payment may, by agreement, as in
the present case, be made by means of a negotiable instrument such as a cheque.
It is equally well settled that payment by means of a negotiable instrument is
prima facie conditional on the instrument being honoured at maturity. The seller's
remedy to sue for the price is suspended during the currency of the instrument.
If the instrument is honoured at maturity, the amount therein will accordingly,
be deemed effectively paid. If, on the other hand, it is dishonoured, the
seller's remedies both under the contract of sale in issue and the Sale of
Goods Act,1893 automatically revives and become enforceable. That seems to me
to be the position of the law. See too section 38(1 )(b) of the Sale of Goods
Act, 1893.
In the present case, it is not in doubt that the intention
of the parties was that the entire balance of the purchase price be secured by
post-dated cheques. The issue was clearly not a question of accepting the
post-dated cheques as unqualified payment for the goods but as a promise to pay
the cheques on the due dates. As things turned out, however, all the cheques in
question were, on presentation for payment, dishonoured.
It cannot be disputed that the acceptance of a negotiable
instrument is normally treated as conditional payment. Certainly, on the facts
of the present transaction, the negotiable instruments issued by the 1st
respondent and accepted by the appellant were taken as conditional payment. It
is my view that where, as in the present case, a negotiable instrument taken as
conditional payment for the price of goods is dishonoured, various remedies for
the breach of such contract of sale including but not limited to an action for
the unpaid balance are available to the seller depending on the facts and
circumstances of each case. I think the court below was in error to hold that
the acceptance of a negotiable instrument in all cases ipso facto converted the
conditional sale in issue, as in the present case, into an absolute sale in the
absence of any evidence to establish that the parties agreed to such
arrangement.
I will now turn to issue 4. This deals with whether the
Court of Appeal was not in error by holding that the 1st respondent had
established a legal right in the equipment as to entitle it to the equitable reliefs
claimed. I will, in particular deal with the equitable reliefs of specific
performance and injunction claimed by the 1st respondent.
A decree of specific performance is a form of relief that is
purely equitable in origin and is one of the earliest examples of the maxim
that equity acts in personam. The fundamental rule is that specific performance
will not be decreed if there is an absolute remedy at law in answer to the
plaintiff's claim, that is to say, where the plaintiff would be adequately compensated
by the common law remedy of damages. See Hutton v. Watting (1948) Ch.26 at 36
and Re Scott and Alvarez's Contract, Scott v. Alvarez (1895) 2 Ch. 603 C.A. at
612 and 615. The jurisdiction in specific performance is based on the
inadequacy of the remedy at law. See too Whiteley Ltd. v. Hilt (1918) 2 K.B.
808 at 819 and Re Clarke (1887) 36 Ch.D. 348 at 352. In Flint v. Brandon (1803)
8 Ves. 159, the learned Master of the Rolls succinctly explained the position
as follows:
"This court does not profess to decree a specific
performance of contracts of every description. It is only where the legal
remedy is inadequate or defective that it becomes necessary for courts of equity
to interfere In the present case, complete justice can be done at law. The
matter in controversy is nothing more than the sum it will cost to put the
ground in the condition in which by the covenant it ought to be"
See too Beswick v. Beswick ( 1968) A.C. 5 8 at 63.
Still on the issue of specific performance of the agreement
for the installation of the plant by the appellant at Kaduna, attention must be
drawn to a second equally important principle. This pertains to the well
established principle that contracts which are personal in nature or which
involve the performance of personal service will not be specifically enforced.
So, in Rigby v. Connol (1880) 14 Ch.D. 482 at 407, Jessel, M.R. was obliged,
and quite rightly in my view, to observe as follows:
"The courts have never dreamt of enforcing agreements
strictly personal in their nature, whether they are agreements of hiring and
service, being the common relation of master and servant, or whether they are
agreements for the purpose of pleasure ..."
In the present case, it cannot be disputed that there is an
absolute remedy at law for the alleged breach complained of by the 1st
respondent in that the 1st respondent would not only be adequately compensated
by the common law remedy of damages, it did in fact make a claim for damages
for the breach complained of. It is also clear to me that the contract sought
to be specifically enforced is personal in nature and/or involve the
performance of personal services. The contract is simply that of hiring and service
between the 1st respondent and the appellant for the transportation of the
plant and equipment from Kontagora to Kaduna at an agreed fee. It was an
employment and/or a master and servant contract. In all these circumstances, it
is clear to me that the court below was,with respect,`in error to have decreed
specific performance of such a category of contract.
On the issue of the perpetual injunction claimed, it is
another fundamental principle that the court will only grant a perpetual
injunction at the suit of a plaintiff in support of a right known to law or
equity. The conduct of a plaintiff must also be taken into consideration in
determining whether or not to grant an injunction. The plaintiff must come to
equity with clean hands and if, therefore, he is in breach of his own
obligations, he will not be granted an injunction. In the same vein, he who
comes to equity must do equity. Accordingly, a plaintiff will not succeed in
his claim for injunction if he is unable or unwilling to carry out his own
obligations.
In the present case, no right known to law or equity was
established by the respondent over the plant and/or equipment in issue. The
court below did not disturb the finding of the trial court that the 1st
respondent failed to fulfil its obligations under Exhibit 1 as there was an
outstanding debt of N635,059.78 representing 60% of the purchase price of the
plant and equipment. I have also found that no legal or equitable claim was
established by the 1st respondent in respect of the goods and that the
appellant acted within its statutory and contractual rights in disposing of by
sale, the said plant and equipment. I think that the equitable doctrines that
he who seeks equity must do equity and that he who comes to equity must come
with clean hands are applicable in this case and are sufficient to defeat the
claims of the 1st respondent for any equitable reliefs. Issue 4 is therefore
resolved in favour of the appellant.
Issue 5 concerns the question of whether or not the rights
of lien, retention and/or immediate possession over the goods provided for in
Exhibit 1 were waived by the appellant in the present proceedings. In this
regard, I need only state that the defence of waiver was neither pleaded by the
1st respondent nor was evidence on the point led. It is a basic principle or
law that parties are bound by their pleadings and it is the case they present
on the basis of those pleadings that must be considered by the courts of law.
No question of waiver therefore arises in this case and the court below, with
respect, was in error to have held that the appellant had waived its right of
lien and/or repossession of the goods.
There is finally issue 6 which challenges the competence of
the court below to have ordered that the equipment be delivered by the
appellant to the 1st respondent subject to payment of the entire outstanding
contract sum by the 1st respondent to the said appellant. I have earlier on in
this judgment set out the three reliefs claimed by the 1st respondent against
the appellant in these proceedings. Perhaps, I should also state that the
appellant filed no counter-claim against the 1st respondent before the trial
court for payment of the balance of the contract sum. I think I need to
emphasize that the principle of law is well settled that a court of law must
not grant to a party a relief which he has not sought or which is more than he
has claimed. See Ekpenyong V. Nyong ( 1975) 2 S.C. 71 at 81-82,Makanjuola v.
Balogun (1989) 3 N.W.L.R.(Part 108) 192 at 206;Olurotimi v. Ige (1993) 8
N.W.L.R. (Part 311) 257 at 271 etc. It is clear that the relief in issue was
neither before the trial court nor before the Court of Appeal. In
particular,the trial court had no opportunity of making any pronouncement on
this controversial relief which was gratuitously made in favour of the
appellant by the court below. It seems to me plain that issue 6 must be
resolved in favour of the appellant. It is for the above and the other reasons
contained in the judgment of my learned brother, Kutigi,JSC that I, too, allow
this appeal and set aside the judgment and orders of the Court of Appeal made
on the 10th day of April,1991 in these proceedings. The judgment and orders of
the trial court are hereby restored and the 1st respondent's claims are hereby
dismissed. I subscribe to the order for costs made in the leading judgment.
KATSINA-ALU, J.S.C.: I had the privilege of reading In draft
the Judgment of my learned brother Kutigi, JSC In this appeal. I agree with It,
for the reasons he has given. I also would allow the appeal and set aside the
decision of the lower court. I abide by the order for costs.
AYOOLA, J.S.C.: (Dissenting Opinion) By the letter dated
28th March,1980,the plaintiff wrote to the defendant as follows:
"We hereby unconditionally and irrevocably undertake to
pay Afrotec Technical Services Nigeria Limited (hereinafter referred to as
Afrotec, the total sum of N702,900.00 (Seven Hundred and Two Thousand, Nine
Hundred Naira) in consideration of their supplying us with the under-mentioned
equipment on the following terms and conditions."
Having stated the equipment and terms and conditions as to
price delivery and commissioning, the plaintiff stated the terms of payment as
follows:
"We confirm that the total contract price of N702,900.00
is to be paid to Afrotec on the following terms:
40% cash deposit of N281,160.00 payable in advance of
delivery.
Balance of 60% payable by six equal instalment of N70,290.00
each secured by post-dated cheques payable
on the 27th April,
27th August and 27th September respectively."
Then followed provision as to interest charged on the
instalmental payment, the rate of which was not stated, and the following
terms:
"We unconditionally and irrevocably, agree that Afrotec
shall have lien on all the machinery until such time as Afrotec receive payment
of the full contract amount of N702,900.00.
We also confirm that should we fail to pay any of the
instalments detailed above within one month of the due date, Afrotec shall take
immediate possession of those properties in specie that remains unpaid for
within the subject of this transaction without hindrance and without recourse.
Upon making a down payment of 40% of the purchase price, the
defendant installed the equipment at the plaintiff's site at Kontagora.The
plaintiff did not meet its obligation to pay installments. It gave as reason,
breakdown of the equipment shortly after its installation at Kontagora and
failure of the defendant to supply spare parts to resuscitate the broken down
equipment. Believing that the equipment would be put to more profitable use in
Kaduna, the plaintiff requested the defendant and the defendant agreed in
January,1980 to transfer the equipment to Kaduna and install the same on the
plaintiff's site. The defendant dismantled the equipment, pursuant to that
agreement. However, it transpired that instead of taking them to Kaduna, it
kept them in its warehouse. After several denials that it had repossessed the
equipment, the defendant sometime in April,1980 claimed that it had repossessed
them.
On these facts, the plaintiff sued the defendant. By its
defence, the defendant asserted that it was "perfectly entitled" to
take possession of the equipment "as such action was provided for in the
sale agreement between the parties." The defendant claimed that it
exercised a right of lien on the plant after all negotiations for payment had
collapsed. The defendant averred that the plaintiff, having failed to perform
its part of the contract was not entitled to the reliefs claimed.
The learned trial Judge, Ibiyeye, J,(as he then was)
dismissed the action. He found that the defendant rightly exercised its right
of lien. He also held the view that by virtue of the default of the plaintiff
property in the equipment had not passed to the plaintiff and, consequently,
the plaintiff had not established any legal right to the remedies he claimed.
All these findings were made after he had described the transaction as a hire
purchase transaction.
On the appeal to the Court of Appeal, the plaintiff's
argument, apart from the arguments on the now inconsequential issues of
novation and waiver, was that the property in the equipment did pass to the
plaintiff and that the trial Judge was wrong in holding to the contrary. It was
further argued that by parting with possession, the defendant extinguished its
right of lien, and that the sale, being an outright sale, the defendant had no
right of repossession.
For his part, counsel for the defendant in the Court of
Appeal argued that the plaintiff had failed to establish a legal right and that
the defendant had established its right of lien.
Uthman Mohammed, J.A.C, (as he then was) had no difficulty
in allowing the plaintiff's appeal. It is not difficult to follow the reasoning
that led him to that conclusion from the following passages from his judgment which
I now quote: "In relying on the right of lien, the 1st respondent (the
defendant) made it abundantly clear that it was passing the property, and
ownership to the appellant (the plaintiff)"
"In the case in hand the appellant claimed ownership of
the equipment and it is quite clear that the 1st respondent did not deny that
assertion. The learned counsel for the respondents had no answer to the claim
by the appellant that title to the equipment had been passed over to the
appellant." "The tone of some of the documents clearly shows that the
1st respondent had transferred title of the equipment to the appellant. The
only safety valve the company retained was the lien over the property which was
agreed to be exercised until the balance due on the equipment was paid."
On the question of lien, the learned justice of the Court of
Appeal (as he then was) held that since:
" ... The equipment in dispute was not in possession of
the 1st respondent when he exercised the right of repossession", the
argument that the defendant was an unpaid seller in possession of the goods
until payment was not available to the defendant. He held that:
"The fact that the seller no longer holds the goods in
his capacity as seller, as it is the case here, but as the buyer's agent or
bailee, may be evidence that he has waived his lien."
The learned Justice further went on to say that acceptance
by the defendant of negotiable instruments, cheques, as payment had converted
"a conditional pay, to an absolute payment, thereby, removing the
necessity for exercise of lien."
In the result, the Court of Appeal allowed the plaintiff's
appeal and entered judgment for the plaintiff restraining the defendant in
terms of the plaintiff's claim and ordering that the equipment be delivered to
the plaintiff on condition that it pays the balance outstanding on the purchase
price. The claim for damages was remitted to the High Court for assessment of
damages.
The defendant has now appealed. For convenience, the
defendant which is the appellant in this appeal, is referred to as "the
defendant;" while the plaintiff, which is the respondent, continues to be
referred to as "the plaintiff'. It is evident that the transaction with
which this case is concerned was clearly one of sale of goods. The trial Judge
had some difficulties in classifying the nature of the transaction, which he
described as "a hire purchase or conditional sale". Proceeding on the
basis that: "it is settled law that conditional sales hardly pass title to
the purchaser unless the attendant conditions have been executed" , he
inevitably came to the conclusion, in effect, that there could have been no
sale, and therefore, no passing of property, until price was fully paid. The
ambivalence of the trial Judge in deciding the nature of the transaction is
understandable, though, not justified. Hire-purchase, credit sale, conditional
credit sale are all cognate transactions, the common factor they share is
deferred payment of part or all of the purchase price. These though cognate
transactions are distinguishable. For a better understanding and resolution of
the issues that have arisen in cases such as the present one, the distinction
should be borne in mind and not glossed over.
In the hire-purchase transaction, there is no question of a
sale coming into being unless and until the hirer exercises at the appropriate
time the option to purchase the goods. Mixed in a hire-purchase transaction is
a contract of hire and option to purchase.
In the credit sale transaction, there is a sale on credit.
The credit may take the form of payment of the entire purchase at an agreed
future time or payment of the purchase price by agreed instalments. In a credit
sale, there is no question of an agreement to purchase the goods at a future
time. A purchaser of goods under a credit sale agreement does not have the
option, which the hirer has, of returning the goods and freeing himself from
the obligation to pay further instalments. Two cases which show the nature and
illustrate the consequences of a credit sale transaction are Osei Kofi v.
Mensah [19301] 1 WACA 76 and Yakassai v. Incar Motors Nigeria Ltd. [1975] NSCC
284 both of which have been referred to by counsel in this appeal.
It is evident that a credit sale is not a hire-purchase
transaction. A credit sale is a sale transaction subject to the same principles
in regard to the passing of property in sale transactions which are not on
credit.
The third cognate transaction is the conditional credit sale,
which is distinguishable from a hire-purchase transaction because of the
absence of option to purchase by the buyer or to resile from the sale by the
seller. A credit sale may be conditional when by the agreement of the parties,
property passes to the buyer on condition that he pays the purchase price as
agreed. The transaction in the case of Sengena v. Poku [IX WACA 143) is an
example of such conditional credit sale. In that case the buyer bought a lorry
on terms that part of the purchase price would be paid by installments. The
seller reserved to himself the right to sell or use the lorry as his own in
payment of the balance remaining should the buyer default in making instalment
payments as agreed. On default of payment by the buyer, the seller seized the
vehicles. The buyer challenged the seizure of the lorry on the ground that it
had become his absolute property. The Divisional Court agreed with him and gave
judgment for the buyer. On appeal, the West African Court of Appeal was of the
view that:
"... the parties made it quite clear in terms of
Exhibit "A", particularly in clause 5, that the purchaser was not to
acquire the property in the lorry unless and until the agreed installments of
the price were paid in full. Until then, the purchaser had only the right to
possession, user and control of the lorry so long as the agreed installments of
the price were punctually paid. It was made quite clear in clause 5, that upon
any default in payment, the owner could seize the lorry and upon notice given,
could sell or use the lorry as his own in payment of the balance remaining.
There was nothing whatever either unlawful or even unreasonable in that clearly
expressed agreement between the parties."
The test whether a contract of sale of specific goods is conditional
or not is whether the contract is made subject to a condition which suspends
the passing of property, so that the property will not pass to the buyer when
the contract is made, but only when the condition is fulfilled. That is made
clear in section 1(2) and (3) of the Sale of Goods Act, 1893 as follows:
"(2) A contract of sale may be absolute or conditional
(3) Where under a contract of sale, the property in the
goods is transferred from the seller to the buyer, the contract is called sale;
but where the transfer of the property in the goods is to take place at a
future time or subject to some conditions thereafter to be fulfilled, the
contract is called an agreement to self. It seems clear from the provisions of
section 1(3) that for a contract of sale to be conditional, the parties must
have agreed either :
(1 ) that the transfer of property in the goods is to take
place at a future time; or,
(2) that the transfer of property in the goods is subject to
some conditions thereafter to be fulfilled.
By section 62(1) of the Act, a 'contract of sale' includes
an agreement to sell as well as a sale. Between the two, there is no
intermediate category (See Benjamin's Sale of Goods [1974 Ed] paragraph 19).
That payment of price is deferred or agreed to be by
instalments does not by itself make a contract of sale a conditional sale. In
order to determine whether a contract of sale is a conditional sale, the
totality of the agreement must be considered. Where there is express term as to
the passing of property, there is no problem. Effect must be given to such
term. It is where there is no such express term that resort must be had to a
construction of the agreement, if in writing, to deduce the intention of the
parties. Usually, such conditions are, for example, inferred from terms
enjoining the buyer to insure the goods against risks, or empowering the seller
to inspect the goods to ensure its good condition, or as in Adigun v.Amao
(1979) LRN 54 requiring the good (a lorry) to be registered in the seller's
name, to mention but a few. In the case of Sengena v. Poku (supra) there was no
difficulty, in construing the contract of sale as a conditional sale. The
parties themselves described the transaction, though inexactly, as an agreement
to "purchase under a hiring purchase system" and the seller expressly
reserved the right to himself "to sell or use the lorry as his own in
payment of the balance remaining" in the event of the buyer's default.
In the present case neither the court below nor this court
had the benefit of the reasoning of the trial Judge that led him to conclude
that the contract of sale was a conditional sale. He seemed to have been of the
view that every credit sale is a conditional sale. That is erroneous. It needs
to be stated that where the nature of a transaction or the intention of the
parties is to be deduced from construction of an agreement in writing or from
the terms of a contract, the trial court should demonstrate from which terms
and by what construction such intention is discovered.
Be that as it may, the Court of Appeal considered the terms
of the contract whereby the defendant shall have lien over the equipment until
the plaintiff paid the purchase price in full and the defendant had the fight
to repossess the equipment, in specie, if the installments were not paid.
Notwithstanding those terms, the Court of Appeal held that the defendant had
"behaved in a way which established beyond all doubt that it had
transferred the title" to the plaintiff. The substance of the defendant's
counsel's argument on this aspect of the appeal is that the Court of Appeal
ignored the intention of the parties as could be identified in the agreement.
The terms which he submitted disclosed an intention of the parties that passing
of property in the goods is conditional are those which gave a lien to the
defendant and which reserved the right to the defendant to "take immediate
possession of the equipment should the plaintiff fail to pay any of the
installments within one month of the due date". It was argued that:
"The right to take immediate possession does not support the right of
ownership credited to the respondent by the Court of Appeal" and, relying
on section 19(1) of the Act, that it was open to the seller to reserve to
himself the right of disposal of the goods until a specified condition is
fulfilled. In this regard I quote the submission made in the defendant's brief
thus:
"It is submitted that the specified condition which was
not fulfilled by the respondent in this appeal is found in Exhibit 1 which
states as follows:
"(a) We unconditionally and irrevocably agree that
Afrotec shall have a lien on all the machinery until such time as Afrotec
receives payment of full contract of N709,200. 00"
(b) We also confirm that should we fail to pay any of the
instalments detailed above within one month of the due date, Afrotec shall take
immediate possession of those properties in specie that remains unpaid for
within the subject of this transaction without hindrance and without
recourse."
Learned counsel for the plaintiff argued for his part that
the conduct of the defendant in parting with possession of the equipment before
full payment was made and even after the plaintiff had defaulted in payment of
three instalments together with charging of interest over the balance of
purchase price were indicative of intention to pass property. Furthermore, it
was argued, the defendant did not expressly reserve ownership by inclusion of a
Romalpa clause. Finally, it was urged that "the clauses in Exhibit 1 relating
to lien and possession cannot create any title" in the defendant after
delivery of the equipment. In my opinion, the question pertinent to the
determination of the nature of the transaction is whether there is any term of
the contract which makes the contract of sale a conditional sale. The
submission of learned counsel for the defendant that the terms of the agreement
granting a lien and a right to take immediate possession of the goods to the
defendant in case of the plaintiff's default are conditions, is, in my opinion,
misconceived. Those terms gave certain rights to the defendant and did not by
themselves indicate that the plaintiff should do anything in order to acquire
property in the goods. The proper approach to the relevance of the terms is whether
the grant to the defendant of lien over the goods and right to take immediate
possession of the goods in case of default of payment raise an inference that
delay in passing of property until payment of full purchase price by the
plaintiff was intended.
That issue falls into proper perspective when the general
nature of a lien is appreciated. The dissenting judgment of Fletcher Moulton
L.J., in Trustee of the Property of F. Lord v. Great Eastern Railway Company
[1908] 2 KB 54 where at pp 63 - 64 explains the nature of a lien under English
law thus:
"A lien under English law is a very peculiar right, but
its precise nature has been conclusively settled by a long line of decisions.
In contrast to the operations of pledging or pawning the creation of the lien
does not, strictly speaking, give to the holder any property in the goods
subject to it: Per Lord Esher in Yungmann v. Briesemann. It is merely a right
to retain the goods until the amount of the lien has been paid. During the
period that the goods are so retained, the true owner may be in very complete
possession of the goods and have and exercise over them, most of the ordinary
powers of an owner; and indeed in my opinion, it is correct to say that there
is nothing in English law which prevents his possessing and exercising any and
every right of an owner in possession which is not inconsistent with the
maintenance by the holder of the lien of his right to retain. Take for example
the best known and most familiar instance of a lien, namely, the lien of an
innkeeper over the goods of a traveller at his inn for the amount of his
charges. The traveler is in actual possession of all his goods. He wears the
clothes, he reads the books. He can put them in his own box and lock them up,
and during the traveller's stay in the inn, the innkeeper has no right to get
at them nor to take them into his own personal possession so as to deprive the
owner of their use. The owner is even entitled to certain legal rights and
remedies in respect of those goods which depend on possession. For example, if
a man in the next room were to detain those goods, the traveller could bring
detinue for them. Nothing that is done with the goods short of removing them
from the hotel affects the existence of the lien. The owner may lock them up in
cupboards in his rooms, of which he alone has the key, and if the innkeeper
were to allot to the traveller a lock in the corridor or in the sample room of
the hotel for the purpose of holding his goods, it would not, in my opinion,
prejudice or affect the lien over them, even though the sacred word
"demise" were used to describe the transaction, more especially if
that "demise" was specifically for the sole purpose of holding goods
which were to remain subject to the lien. But, although the innkeeper not only
may, but under certain circumstances, must thus leave the goods in the actual
possession of the owner. There are limits, which he may not pass without losing
his lien. He must not permit the traveller to take the goods out of the Inn or to
put it more generally, he must not do anything that amounts to an abandonment
of the power to exercise his right of retention."
Then, at page 71 he said:
"As I have said, a lien gives no property in the goods,
nor does it entitle the holder to take possession of the goods, for it implies
that they are already in his possession in the sense that I have explained, and
not in the uncontrolled possession of the owner. (Emphasis mine)
It is pertinent to observe that the House of Lords allowed
the appeal in G. E. Ry v. Lords [1909) 1 AC 109.
It is clear that a lien is merely a right to retain the
goods subject to it until the amount of the lien has been paid. The lien does
not give to the holder any property in the goods. A legal lien was described in
Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol 28 (4th Edition) paragraph 702 thus:
"In its primary or legal sense, 'lien' means a right at
common law in one man to retain that which is rightfully and continuously in
his possession belonging to another until the present and accrued claims of the
person in possession are satisfied. In the primary sense, it is given by law
and not by contract."
Apart from lien which the law gives, there is lien by
contract which is right to detain goods as security. In Halsbury's Law of
England (4th Edition) Vol 28 paragraph 73, the nature and formation of such
lien is described thus:
"Lien in its proper sense is a right which law gives,
but it is useful to speak of lien by contract, and numerous instances of a
right to detain goods as security depends for their effect on the validity,
scope and construction of the governing contract."
Normally, a lien implies that property in the goods is in
another other than the person holding the lien. Section 39(1) provides that:
"Subject to the provisions of this Law and of any
written law in that behalf, notwithstanding that the property in the goods may
have passed to the buyer, the unpaid seller of goods, as such, has by
implication of law -
(a) a lien on the goods for the price which he is in possession
of them ".
By section 39(2), when property in goods has not passed to
the buyer, the unpaid seller has right to withhold delivery. Commenting on
section 39(2) it was stated, quite rightly, in Benjamin's Sale of Goods [1974]
Edition paragraph 15 - 29 that:
"A lien, stricto sensu, can arise only when the
property held belongs to another hence, the right of withholding delivery
exercised by the unpaid seller over goods in which he still has property, is a
quasi-lien."
Enough, I believe, has been said to show that the term as to
lien contained in the agreement of the parties does not by itself raise any
inference of an intention to delay the passing of property to the buyer. If
anything, the inference which it raises is that which is consistent with the
nature of lien, and that is, that property has passed to the buyer.
By the agreement of the parties, the defendant was given a
right to "take immediate possession of those properties in specie that
remains unpaid for within the subject of this transaction without hinderance
and without recourse" should the plaintiff fail to pay any of the agreed
instalments within one month of the due date.
I do not interpret this right as suggesting an intention to
delay passing of property to the plaintiff.
The entire agreement must be read as a whole. By the
agreement, the plaintiff bought the equipment and agreed to pay an additional
agreed price of N28,000.00 for delivery and an additional cost of N10,000.00
for commissioning of the plant. Interest was charged for delayed payment.
When it is disputed whether property has passed to the buyer
or not, the approach which is in accord with the Sale of Goods Act, 1893 is as
contained in sections 17 and 18 of the Act. In my opinion, the following
propositions should guide the court in determining the time when property
passes when there is a contract for the sale of specific or ascertained goods:
(i) Property in the goods is transferred to the buyer at
such time as the parties to the contract intend it to be transferred.
(ii) Where the terms of the contract, the conduct of the
parties and the circumstances of the case disclose the intention such must be
given effect to.
(iii) Where the terms of the contract, the conduct of the
parties and the circumstances of the case, do not disclose a definite intention
as to the time at which the property in the goods is to pass to the buyer, the
presumptions contained in section 18 of the Act should apply.
In this case, the relevant provision of section 18 is Rule
1, which provides that:
"Where there is an unconditional contract for the sale
of specific goods in a deliverable state the property in the goods passes to
the buyer when the contract is made, and it is immaterial whether the time of
payment or the time of delivery, or both, be postponed." (Emphasis mine)
I have held that this is not a conditional contract for sale
of the equipment. I also find that there is nothing in the terms of the
contract, the conduct of the parties and the circumstances of the case that
disclose any intention different from that presumed by Rule 1 of section 18.
It is clear from the judgment of the trial Judge that he
found that the defendant had exercised its "general right of lien in
consonance with the spirit and intendment of exhibit V.This was rejected by the
Court of' Appeal in a judgment delivered by Mohammed JCA (as he then was). They
held that:
(i) The equipment was not in
possession of the 1st respondent as seller but as bailee of the plaintiff when
he exercised the right of repossession;
(ii) The acceptance of negotiable
instruments as payment (before the cheques were dishonoured) had converted the
conditional sale of the equipment into an absolute payment and the 1st
respondent could not thereafter exercise its lien;
(iii) Following Yakassai v. Incar Motors Nigeria
Ltd
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