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Summary Illegality of contract

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Summary notes on the scenarios where a contract may be illegal, within the area of the law of obligations / contract law

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January 18, 2024
Number of pages
2
Written in
2020/2021
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Illegality of Contract
Sources of Illegality:
- Statutory illegality
 All contracts expressly or impliedly prohibited by statute are illegal.
 Sale of organs – Human Tissue Act 2004 s32(1)(d)
 Insider trading
 No contract shall be void or unenforceable by reason only of s52 – CJA s52,
63(2)
- Illegality at common law
 ‘a very unruly horse’
 ‘with a good man in the saddle, the unruly horse can be kept under control’


Public Policy:
Contracts to commit a crime:
- Statute does not need to specifically prohibit contract
 Triggered if contract entails engaging in the prohibited conduct
 Can relate to formation, purpose or performance
- Saunders v Edwards
 Contract to sell flat and its furniture
 Vendor fraudulently represented that flat included roof garden
 Parties valued furniture at £5000 rather than £1000 to save on stamp duty
 Held: illegality did not prevent purchaser from claiming damages
- Extends to contracts to indemnify against the consequences of a crime
 Imposes limits on the insurance of commercial risks
 A company cannot insure against the risk of a breach of competition law
- Contracts to commit some other civil wrongs
 Covers some civil wrongs such as fraud or libel (Apthorpe v Neville)
 Unclear whether it includes others
 Les Laboratories Servier v Apotex Inc
o Main focus of illegality should be on criminal acts
o Ex turpi causa principle founded on acts contrary to public laws
o Should only apply to civil wrongs which are ‘quasi-criminal’ such as
dishonesty
o Others only affect private interest, not public interest
- Contracts which oust the jurisdiction of the courts
 E.g. contracts prohibiting a party from bringing legal proceedings (however
they are allowed ADR clauses and the creation of non-legal obligations)
- Also covers contracts obstructing the admission of justice
 E.g. a contract agreeing to commit perjury or destroy evidence
- Agreements in restraint of trade
 Agreement restricting liberty to carry on trade with other persons
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