Spencer v. Harding

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Spencer v. Harding
Court of Common Pleas
Date decided: 29 June 1879
Full case name: Spencer and others v. Harding and others
Citations: (1870) L.R. 5 C.P. 561
Judges sitting: Willes, Keating and Montague Smith, JJ.
Cases cited: Williams v. Carwardine
Legislation cited: None
Case history
Prior actions: None
Subsequent actions: None
Keywords
Contract, offer, invitation to treat, tender

Spencer v. Harding (1870) L.R. 5 C.P. 561 is an English law case concerning the requirements of offer and acceptance in the formation of a contract. The case established that an offer inviting tenders to be submitted for the purchase of stock did not amount to an offer capable of acceptance to sell that stock, but rather amounted to an invitation to treat. The judgment was delivered by Willes, J., with Keating and Montague Smith, JJ. concurring.

Contents

[edit] Material facts

The Defendants sent out a circular containing the following wording:

28, King Street, Cheapside, May 17th, 1869. We are instructed to offer to the wholesale trade for sale by tender the stock in trade of Messrs. G. Eilbeck & Co., of No. 1, Milk Street, amounting as per stock-book to 2503l. 13s. 1d., and which will be sold at a discount in one lot. Payment to be made in cash. The stock may be viewed on the premises, No. 1, Milk Street, up to Thursday, the 20th instant, on which day, at 12 o'clock at noon precisely, the tenders will be received and opened at our offices. Should you tender and not attend the sale, please address to us sealed and inclosed, 'Tender for Eilbeck's stock.' Stock-books may be had at our offices on Tuesday morning. Honey, Humphreys, & Co.

The Defendants offered by this circular to sell the stock to the highest bidder for cash. The Claimants sent a tender to the Defendants which, following the submission of all tenders, was the highest tender. The Defendants refused to sell the stock to the Claimants.

[edit] Submissions

The Defendants submitted that the circular was not intended to be a binding offer capable of acceptance. Rather, it was merely a circular inviting others to make offers. The Claimants submitted that the circular did constitute a valid offer and that the Claimant had, by submitting the highest tender and attending all the necessary meetings, accepted that offer.

[edit] Judgment

The court held that the circular was not an offer, but merely an invitation to gather tenders, upon which the Defendants were entitled to act. Willes, J. held that the absence of any specific wording such as "and we undertake to sell to the highest bidder" rebutted any presumption that the Defendants had intended to be bound by a contract and distinguished the present circumstances from instances of reward contract offers or an offer to the world.

[edit] See also