JUDGMENT
LAMPTEY, JA.
The facts that led to the
mounting of the action in the
instant appeal are fairly simple
and straight forward. These are
that Hasnem Co’s. Manager
entered the premises of S.A.T.
in Sekondi bought and paid for 6
chairs on 16th August 1997. He
took immediate delivery of 2
chairs and was advised by the
storekeeper of S.A.T. to send a
vehicle at his expense to
collect the four remaining
“executive swivel secretarial
chairs” the following day.
Accordingly, a vehicle was sent
to S.A.T. the next day to
collect and take delivery of the
four special chairs. The driver
was sent back without the four
chairs. After several fruitless
and disappointing journeys,
needless to add time consuming
and expensive journeys and when
it became obvious that S.A.T.
was in no position to honour and
perform its obligation under the
agreement Hasnem sued S.A.T. on
16th June 1989, that is, after a
period of ten years had
elapsed. It claimed an order of
specific performance directed at
S.A.T. as claimed and stated in
its writ of summons. The case
was heard on the merits. The
trial magistrate entered
judgment for Hasnem. In place
of an order for specific
performance which was the relief
sought by the summons he ordered
S.A.T. to pay damages in the sum
of ¢1.5 million to Hasnem Co.
together with costs. S.A.T. Co.
was dissatisfied and aggrieved
by the judgment. It appealed to
the High Court, Cape Coast. The
appeal was heard on the merits.
The appellate court dismissed
the appeal and affirmed the
judgment of the District Court.
It is against the judgment of
the High Court, Cape Coast that
S.A.T. Co. appealed further to
this court on eight grounds of
appeal and one additional ground
of appeal.
Before I deal with the appeal in
the merits, I must consider an
issue of law raised, in limine,
by counsel for Hasnem Co. The
issue was formulated as follows:
“In response to paragraph 2 ……..
It is submitted that to the
extent that no leave of the
court was sought and granted to
argue additional grounds of
appeal filed on 30th October
1998, the court should ignore
all the arguments purported to
be advanced in support of the
said additional grounds of
appeal”
In reply, counsel for S.A.T. Co.
stated that by consent of
lawyers for the parties herein,
the Court of Appeal had ruled
that the additional grounds
filed without leave of the Court
be admitted to form part of the
record of appeal. He did not
exhibit a certified true copy of
the said ruling of this Court in
support of his submission. Be
that as it may, since counsel
for S.A.T. Co. is an officer of
the Court, I have no doubt that
he stated the true position as
he was in duty bound to do and
act. In any case, the objection
was raised in open court when
the appeal was called for
hearing. I take the view that
the objection was abandoned
counsel for Hasnem. I therefore
over rule the objection and hold
that the additional grounds
filed without leave of the Court
of Appeal are properly before
this court. I admit the
additional grounds of appeal as
part of the record of appeal.
In his statement of case on
behalf of S.A.T. Co., counsel
submitted that, “6. The
District Magistrate …awarded
damages to the plaintiff ….. The
authority for the exercise of
this power was founded on the
case of Lartey v. Bannerman
(1976) 2 GLR 461, even though
there was no alternative relief
for damages as was the case in
the circumstances of the case of
Lartey v. Bannerman.”
He next argued in paragraph 7
that the trial court wrongly
applied the law stated in Dam v.
Addo (1962) 2 GLR 200 at 203 to
206. He concluded that the
trial magistrate erred in law
when he failed to dismiss the
claim of Hasnem Co. Based on the
above he submitted that the
appellate court fell into error
when it affirmed the judgement
of the trial court. He argued
that the appellate court erred
in law when it affirmed the
award of damages to Hasnem Co.
since it did not seek that
relief by its writ of summons.
In reply, counsel for Hasnem Co.
submitted that the appellate
High Court did not err in law
when it affirmed the award of
damages. He based himself on the
principle of restitution in
integrum. He stated that the
case of Dan v. Addo could be
distinguished from the instant
Case. I find the submission
that the trial magistrate erred
when he applied the statement of
the law in Lartey v. Bannerman
in determining the case before
him is plainly misconceived. A
careful and critical reading of
the Lartey case will show that a
court minded to do justice and,
in particular, to avoid
multiplicity of actions must,
suo moto, order or make such
amendments as would resolve and
determine the real issue in
dispute between the feuding
parties before it. At page 467
of the report of the Lartey
case, Amissah JA. stated the
legal position thus:-
“We in this court have power,
under Rule 31 of the Court of
Appeal Rules, 1962 (L.I. 28)
where we think that the
interests of justice demand it,
to amend the record in the case
so as to determine the real
question in controversy. In my
opinion this is a case in which
our powers should be exercised.
It is a procedural matter. The
substance of the case is not
changed in any way. I would
accordingly amend the writ and
pleadings by substituting the
name of Joseph Blankson Lartey
for Patience Larle Lartey.”
Sowah JA. expressed the same
opinion when he stated:—
“I am in agreement with the
order of the court substituting
Blankson Lartey for the
plaintiff ……” at page 467 of the
report. Jiagge JA, agreed with
the order made by the court.
The issue of law raised in the
Lartey case was whether or not
the Court had power, suo moto,
to amend the writ and the
pleadings in the appropriate
case. The answer is that Rule 31
of L.I. 218 and R.31 of C.I. 19
empowers the court of appeal to
exercise that power
It is trite learning that the
Court would and should exercise
this power in the appropriate
case. I start with a
consideration of some only of
early cases. In Nkyi XI v. Kuma
(1959) G.L.R. the Court of
Appeal amended the writ of
summons by adding a declaration
title, a relief that the
plaintiff had not pacifically
claimed by the respondent. In
the case of Dove v. Wuta-Ofei
(1966) G.L.R. 299 S.C. the
former Supreme Court, of its own
motion, amended the title of the
suit by adding the words “for
himself and on behalf of his
wife Mrs. Ofei”. At p. 317 of
the report, Apaloo J.S.C. (as he
them was) said:
“That (amendment) would put an
end to that objection of the
plaintiff’s wife bringing an
action of her own to seek
protection in respect of that
part of the building that lies
on her plot………”.
Apaloo J.S.C. applied the
decision of the West African
Court of Appeal in Akyirefie v.
Paramount Stool of Breman-Esiam
(1951) 13 WACA 331. See also
the case of Ababio IV v. Quartey
(1916) P.C. 74 28: 40. I must
point out that the power granted
to the Court of Appeal by Rule
31 of L.I. 218 was restored to
this Court by Rule 31 of C.I.
19. In the case of Mamudu
Wangara v. Gyato Wangara (1982 –
83) 1 G.L.R. 639 the Court of
Appeal held at holdings (1) and
(4) as follows:—
“(1) An appeal is by way of
rehearing and that meant having
a look at and taking into
consideration all the relevant
evidence on record. The
Appropriate case. The answer is
that Rule 31 of L.I. 218 and
R.31 of CI. 19 empowers the
court of appeal to exercise that
power.
It is trite learning that the
Court would and should exercise
this power in the appropriate
case. I start with a
consideration of some only for
early cases. In Nkyi XI v. Kuma
(1959) G.L.R. the Court of
Appeal amended the writ of
summons by adding a declaration
title, a relief that the
plaintiff had not pacifically
claimed by the respondent. In
the case of Dove v. Wuta-Ofei
(1966) G.L.R. 299 S.C the former
Supreme Court, of its own
motion, amended the title of the
suit by adding the words “for
himself and on behalf of his
wife Mrs. Ofei.” At p. 317 of
the report. Apaloo J.S.C (as he
them was) said:
“That (amendment) would put an
end to that objection of the
plaintiff’s wife bringing an
action of her own to seek
protection in respect of that
part of the building that lies
on her plot……………”.
Apaloo J.S.C applied the
decision of the West African
Court of Appeal in Akyirefie v.
Paramount Stool of Breman-Esiam
(1951) 13 WACA 331. See also
the case of Ababio IV v. Quartey
(1916) P.C 74 28: 40. I must
point out that the power granted
to the Court of Appeal by Rule
31 of L.I 218 was restored to
this Court by Rule 31 of CI. 19.
In the case of Mamudu Wangara v.
Gyato Wangara (1982 – 83) 1
G.L.R 639 the Court of Appeal
held at holdings (1) and (4) as
follows:-
“(1) An appeal is by way of
rehearing and that meant having
a look at and taking into
consideration all the relevant
evidence on record. The
appellate court was virtually in
the same position as if the
rehearing were the original
hearing and might review the
whole case and not merely the
points as to which the appeal
was brought…..
(4) Where there was a legal
right which could be asserted
either at law or in equity a
court of equity had jurisdiction
to grant an injunction in
protection of that right……..
The plaintiff’s right of
occupation therefore ought to be
protected by injunction.”
The decided cases all go to show
that the appellate court in
order to avoid multiplicity of
actions could amend any writ of
summons where it was appropriate
to do so, and in case where it
would not cause injustice to the
other party. The principles of
law stated in these cases may be
applied in the instant case. On
the undisputed facts pleaded and
the evidence on record it is
plain and clear beyond any
argument that this was a simple
case of breach of contract. The
remedies open to an aggrieved
party under the Sale of Goods
Act 1962 (Act 137) included a
claim for damages for breach of
the contract. Solicitors acting
for the Hasnem Co. failed and or
omitted to seek leave to amend
the writ to make this claim
namely, damages for breach of
contract up to the hearing of
the plaint at the District
Court. At the appellate High
Court, counsel for Hasnem Co.
did not advert to Act 137 and
seek to amend the endorsement in
the writ of summons with leave
of that court in order to claim
damages in the alternative; to
avoid multiplicity of actions.
This court must exercise its
powers under Rule 31 of C.I.
19. On the record, the
undisputed evidence satisfied me
that S.A.T. Co. breached the
contract to supply and deliver
to Hasnem Co. four executive
swivel secretarial chairs and
ought to be condemned to pay
damages for the breach. See on
this SS. 15 (1) and 16(4) of Act
137. See further SS. 53 & 54 of
Act 137. I will amend the writ
to include in the alternative
under head (b) a claim for
damages for breach of contract.
The law governing the breach of
contract is stated at S.15 of
Act 157 thus:—
‘15(1) unless otherwise agreed
the seller must be ready and
willing to deliver the goods in
exchange for the price”. In the
instant case the goods were sold
but description and Hasnem Co.
promptly paid the whole of the
purchase price, which S.A.T. Co.
accepted. S.A.T. Co. was
enjoined to make immediate
delivery of all the six chairs
to the plaintiff Co. on the same
date, place and time. In the
present case this was not done
and had not been done at the
date the writ issued. The law
was breached by S.A.T. Co. It
also failed to satisfy S. 16 (4)
of Act 137 which provides:—
“16(4) where the buyer agrees to
accept delivery from the seller
at a date later than that
stipulated in the contract
without substituting another
date therefore the seller shall
do so within reasonable time,
having regard in particular to
the reasons for which delivery
was postponed and the buyer may
on reasonable notice to the
seller notify him of the latest
date on which delivery will be
accepted.”
The statutory obligation of the
seller is clear and does not
admit of any problem in its
application. In the instant
case, it cannot be disputed that
S.A.T. Co. breached the duty to
supply and deliver the 4
remaining swivel chairs within
reasonable time. I must point
out that the parties cannot in
law contract outside the express
provisions of Act 137. On the
evidence before the District
Court the S.AT. Co. breached S.
16(a) of Act 137. Hasnem Co. in
these circumstances could resort
to the remedies spelt out at
S.49 of Act 137 or in the
alternative, refer to and rely
on the personal right of a buyer
spelt out in Act 137 at SS. 53
and 54. I must point out that
the above rights of the buyer
are legal rights.
The quantum of damages for
breach of contract are stated at
S. 54(1) of Act 137 as—
“54(1) The loss which could
reasonably have been forseen by
the seller at the time when the
contract was made as likely to
result from the breach of
contract.” The indices for
assessing the quantum of damages
are provided at S.54 (2) of Act
137 as follows:—
“54(2)
(a) Where there is an available
market for the goods in question
the measure of damages is prima
facie to be ascertained by the
difference between the market or
current price and the contract
price.”
(b) In any other case at the
time or times of the refusal to
deliver the goods.” In my
opinion these legal rights
guaranteed to a purchaser cannot
be compromised and are
enforceable. I believe that
solicitor for Hasnem Co. should
have pursued in the special
circumstances the legal rights
under Act 137 and not relied on
the equitable reliefs’ and
remedies available to Hasnem Co.
A ground of appeal argued by
counsel for S.A.T. Co. was that
the judgment was against the
weight of evidence on record.
He did not advert to the
evidence on record to
demonstrate and support this
ground of appeal. I note that
before the appellate High Court
this ground of appeal was not
raised and consequently was not
dealt with by that court. I note
further that under ground (d) on
the notice of appeal an
indication was given to the
effect that “the judgment cannot
be supported having regard to
the law, statute and nature of
the evidence adduced at the
trial”. I am amazed at the
clear breach of Rules 5 and 6 of
C.I. 19 by counsel for S.A.T.
Co. No purpose would be served
by reproducing these simple and
well-known rules. I would
nonetheless deal with the
submission made on this ground
of appeal. The short answer to
this ground is that the
complaint was not open to him to
make in the light of evidence
from his own witness, DW1 Mr.
Edwin Asamoah Aidoo. He told
the court in his
evidence-in-chief as follows:
“DW1
I am the General Manager of G.B.
Ollivant ……. I have heard of
S.A.T Co……… it ceased to exist
in 1988. From the records, I
got to know that the plaintiff
placed an order for 4 (four)
Executive Swivel Secretarial
Chairs in 1979 which have since
not been supplied……. S.A.T. was
producing the chairs by itself
but production was closed in
1986”. This evidence
corroborated the case of Hasnem
Co. against S.A.T. Co.; that is
to say, that S.A.T Co. breached
its contract to deliver to
Hasnem Co. four special
Executive Swivel Chairs within
reasonable time. I find that
this ground of appeal fails.
I note that counsel for Hasnem
Co. made reference to the
Limitation Decree and sought to
establish that the claim of
Hasnem Co. was not statute
barred he wrote as follows—
“…..there is evidence to show
that up to 1987 the plaintiff
was pursuing his claim and
therefore cannot be said to have
gone to sleep. Again since
between 1983 and 1987 the
defendants accepted their
liability to supply the chairs
the matter cannot be said to be
statute barred.”
I do not wish to deal with the
issue raised on limitation since
it was not a ground of appeal
stated in the notice of appeal.
Further, this ground of appeal
was not argued in the written
statement of case filed on
behalf of S.A.T. Co. No useful
purpose will be served by
considering the observation made
by counsel for Hasnem Co. since
this issue was not raised by
S.A.T. Co. in this appeal.
In the result I find the appeal
fails. I dismiss it. I will
amend the writ of summons by
adding under head (b) on the
writ of summons of claim in the
alternative for damages for
breach of contract. I enter
judgment for Hasnem Co. for
damages for breach of contract
against S.A.T. Co. Ltd. I make
the following orders:—
(1) S.A.T. Co. to return the sum
of money paid that is ¢3,400.00
to Hasnem;
(2) S.A.T. to pay damages of
¢196,600.00 calculated from 1983
to date.
(3) S.A.T. Co. to pay for cost
of hiring truck at ¢8,500 x 6
being in total ¢51,000.00.
G. L. LAMPTEY
JUSTICE OF APPEAL.
WOOD (MRS.) JA:
About the 15th of August 1997,
the plaintiff/respondent bought
from, (and made full payment)
the Swiss African Trading
Company (Beam) a division of UAC
Ghana Ltd., six executive chairs
made up of two executive and 4
secretarial chairs at the cost
¢3,400. When after repeated
demands the company failed to
deliver the four secretarial
chairs, the respondents took out
a writ of summons against the
S.A.T. Company, for an order of
specific performance for the
supply of the four swivel
chairs. The court of first
instance, which was the district
court, found as a fact (and) as
was pleaded by the respondents
that:
(1) The parties entered into a
valid contract for the supply of
the chairs.
(2) The respondents fully
performed their obligation under
the contract by providing the
necessary consideration in full.
(3) The company then substituted
by UAC Ghana Ltd., were in
breach
3. The company, then
substituted by UAC Ghana Ltd.,
were in breach by their failure
to deliver the goods in
accordance with the terms of the
contract. The court however,
for stated reason, declined to
order specific performance,
choosing rather to award a
monetary compensation by way of
general damages for the said
breach.
Being clearly dissatisfied with
the said decision, the UAC
appealed to the High Court on
the main ground that the trial
court erred in awarding the
alternate remedy when the
respondents have not claimed
that relief. The appellate High
Court Judge agreed with them in
principle that the order was
clearly erroneous. But,
concluding that the respondents
use the word specific
performance semantically she
held
“The substance of their claim is
that the appellants be made to
buy similar chairs at the
current price” She therefore
made the following order:
“That the appellants are either
to pay to the respondents the
current cost of the 4 chairs on
or before 15/7/96 or are to go
and buy these 4 chairs at the
current price or cost of similar
make and deliver same to the
respondents on or before
15/7/96.
It is against this order that
appellants have further appealed
to this court on eight grounds.
The relief they are seeking in
this court is a total setting
aside of the orders or the two
courts and a dismissal of the
respondents action in its
entirety..
Although eight grounds of appeal
were filed, only six were
argued. In other words two were
abandoned. These are the
original ground (b), which
raised specifically the question
of statute bar and (c), which
dealt with the issue of the
excessiveness and harshness of
the costs.
The appeal was therefore fought
on original ground (a) and
additional grounds 1, 2, 3, and
4.
With respect to the original
ground (a) and additional
grounds 2, 3, and 4 which were
argued together, it was
submitted that once the
appellate High Court Judge found
that the subject matter was not
of intrinsic value and
consequently that the trial
magistrate was right in
declining the prayer for the
order of specific performance
she ought altogether to have
dismissed the respondents
claim. It was contended that by
failing to do so and proceeding
to make the findings and drawing
those conclusions I have
referred, she proprio motuo
substituted a case different
from and inconsistent with the
reliefs claimed by the
respondents. The argument
therefore is that the orders she
made are clearly erroneous and
ought not to be allowed to
stand.
Very much the same arguments
were advanced in support of the
additional ground (1) and
original ground (d). Again it
was submitted that the appellate
judge erred in her conclusion
that respondent used the words
specific performance
sequentially”. It was urged
that the substance of the claim
was that appellants be ordered
to purchase from the open market
and deliver to them similar
chairs or be made to pay the
current cost of the chairs. The
contention again was that by so
doing the learned judge was by
the grant of a relief they never
asked for proprio mutu
substituting a case different
from that which was set up.
Now at the appellants hearing,
the learned High Court Judge
held as follows:—
“I agree with learned counsel
for the appellant that the trial
magistrate erred in awarding
damages to the respondents after
he dismissed their only relief
for specific performance. As was
stated in Dam vs. Addo 1962 2
GLR 200 at 203 – 206, a Supreme
Court decision, it is wrong for
a court on its own motion to
substitute a claim or relief for
a party which claim was not
asked for”.
She then proceeded to outline
the courts duty at the rehearing
as follows:-
“In this instant appeal, the
court has to determine whether
an award of general damages
will adequately compensate the
respondents? If not, then should
the trial magistrate have
decreed specific performance of
the contract between the
parties?”
Her answers to these questions
was that: “In view of the fact
that similar chairs can be
obtained at the open market,
albeit at exorbitant and rising
cost, these chairs cannot be
said to the intrinsic value.
Similarly an award of damages
will not adequately compensate
the respondents. It is the
considered view of the court
that the respondents used the
word specific performance
semantically. The substance of
their claim is that the
appellants are made to go and
buy similar chairs at the
current price for them or they
may be made to pay the current
cost of the chairs to them. In
effect it is the principle of
restituo in intergrum that their
claim hinges on.”
It is these findings and
conclusions that have provoked
this instant appeal. In my
view, the following two basic
findings by the learned High
Court Judge are without any
legal basis.
1. That an award of damages
will not adequately compensate
the respondents.
2. The words “specific
performance” as endorsed on the
writ was used indeed it is her
views on the semantically and
that the substance of their
claim is as she has outlined.
Substance of the respondents
claim that ought properly to
attract the criticism that a
claim inconsistent with or
different from that which was
formulated was being
substituted. It is plain from
both the endorsement and the
statement of claim that the
respondents were seeking an
order for specific performance,
pure and simple – an order
directed at the appellants that
they deliver these four
secretarial swivel chairs which
under the contract of sale they
agree to supply or deliver. In
our jurisdiction, it is a decree
they as buyers of goods are
entitled to claim. Indeed this
right of the buyer to invoke the
jurisdiction of the court and
apply for this decree that the
contract be specifically
performed has been statutorily
provided for under S. 58 of the
Sale of Goods Act, 1962 Act 137,
it states.
“In any action for breach of
contract to deliver specific or
ascertained goods, the court
may, if it thinks fit, by its
judgment direct that the
contract should be specifically
performed without giving the
seller the option of retaining
the goods on payment of
damages. The judgment may be
unconditional or upon such terms
as to damages, costs and other
wise as the court may think
fit.”
True, it lies entirely within
the discretion of the court
whether to grant or refuse the
decree, but the right to apply
for it is open to a buyer of
ascertained or specific goods.
In my view then, the finding on
the substance of the claim is
erroneous and the same ought
together with the orders flowing
therefrom, namely that the
“appellants be made to purchase
similar chairs from the open
market” for delivery to the
respondents ought to be set
aside.
And now to the critical question
raised in this appeal. And it
is this: Since both the trial
magistrate as well as the
appellate High Court Judge found
that the decree of specific
performance is not the
appropriate remedy must the
respondents action not be
dismissed. Stated differently,
will it lie in the power of this
court to grant the alternate
remedy of damages for.
Non-delivery, a relief which was
never prayed for by the innocent
party? Interestingly,
respondent counsel seems to have
lost interest in damages and has
urged at this rehearing that we
do grant the order of specific
as the circumstances do justify
it. I am afraid I do not think
so. He cannot in my view be
entitled to an order of specific
performance.
Under S.58 of Act 137 specific
performance may be decreed only
in respect of “ascertained” or
“specific goods.” The statutory
definition of ascertained or
specific goods is provided for
under interpretation section S.
81 (1) of Act 137. “Ascertained
goods,” means goods identified
and agreed upon after a contract
of sale is made, whilst
“specific goods” means goods
identified and agreed upon at
the time a contract of sale is
made.”
Unfortunately, I do not think
the evidence can sustain or
justify the finding made by the
trial magistrate that the chairs
were either “ascertained” or
“Specific” goods within the
meaning of the Act. There is no
evidence that either at the time
of, or after the contract of,
sale the parties identified and
agreed upon any four particular
of specific secretarial swivel
chairs that they are the very
chairs (and no other) which are
to be supplied. On the
contrary, it does appear from
the evidence that the contract
was for the supply for any four
ordinary secretarial swivel
chairs, presumably from the lot
which they manufacture for sale
to the general public. Such
items would not, in my
respectful view qualify as
ascertained specific goods and
in respect of which under S. 57
of Act 137 specific performance
may be decreed I also notice
that the trial magistrate did
conclude that these four swivel
chairs are unique and so fall
into these class of goods
(perhaps under common law, but
certainly not under the statute)
in respect of which the order
may be granted. I do not agree
with this finding for there is
no evidence to support it. The
position then, with respect to
these goods is that both at
common law and under the statute
that is Act 137, specific
performance cannot be decreed.
I will therefore deal with the
most critical issue raised in
this appeal. And it is this:
Having come to the conclusion
that the remedy sought was
inappropriate, does it lie in
the power of the court to award
damages as the proper judicial
relief, when the evidence
clearly shows that relief was
never claimed. I think the
trial magistrate was right in
not simply dismissing the
respondent case but awarding
them damages in the
alternative. Indeed in my view,
the grant of the relief does not
in any way amount to a breach of
the rule in Dam vs. Addo
(supra). We may for a moment
look briefly at that case the
facts which led to the
formulation of this well known
and of used principle of law.
The appellant in that case sued
the respondents for accounts and
also for the sum of £588,185 as
due and owing him and arising
from a transaction involving
guns and ammunitions. Each
party, as happens in most civil
actions set up a rival claim
resulting in the setting down
for consideration of a number of
serious factual issues. The
trial court examined their
respective claims and opted for
the appellant’s version. For
some strange reason however,
judgment was not given for the
appellant in whose favour the
critical issues were resolved,
but for the respondent and based
purely on facts which were never
pleaded at the trial, and so
naturally did not form part of
his case, and as was not
altogether, in respect of which
no evidence was led. It is
against the background that the
supreme court speaking with one
voice through Adumuah Bossman
JSC stated the position thus:
“The process of consideration
and weighing up of the
respective cases of the parties
by which the learned judge
arrived at the conclusion at
which he did arrive, would
appear to have involved the
substitution by him proprio
motuo of a case substantially
different from and inconsistent
with the case put forward by the
respondents and ultimate
acceptance by him of that
substituted case which was not
the respondents case at all.
The acceptance in favour of a
party of a case different from
and inconsistent with that which
he himself has put forward in
and by his pleadings, has been
consistently held to be
unjustifiable and fundamentally
wrong both by the English
superior courts and our local
superior courts.” Of course his
Lordships took the opportunity
to review both the English and
local cases, one of which dates
as far back as 1904. They are:
1. Essom Petroleum Co. Ltd. vs.
South part Corporation 1956 AC
218 at 238 - 239
2. Fischer and Co. vs. J.O.
Thompson 1904 1 Ren. 302.
3. Nana Akua Oye (ohemia) on
behalf of the Oman Akropong vs.
Yao Baddu and FWQ Akuffo – 1924
D ct. 21 – 25 116.
4. Oloto vs. Williams 1944 (10
WACA & 23 pg. 24 – 25).
The firm conclusion his
Lordships came to is that cases
should be determined purely
along the lines on which they
were fought, as disclosed by the
pleadings and it would be
manifestly wrong and unjust for
a court to
“substitute or accept a case
contrary to, inconsistent with
that which the party himself
puts forward whether he be
plaintiff or defendant.”
The rationale behind this rule
is not difficult to find. It
has been so succinctly stated by
his Lordship that I can do not
better than to use the very
words of their Lordships as
indeed they did by relying on a
speech of Lord Normand in the
Essom Petroleum Company case and
so I borrow from their
Lordships.
“The function of pleadings is to
give fair notice of a case which
has to be met, so that the
opposing party may direct his
evidence to the issue disclosed
by them. To condemn a person on
a ground of which no fair notice
has been given, may be as great
a denial of justice as to
condemn him on a ground on which
his evidence has been improperly
excused (Dicter of Lord Norneard
the Esson Petroleum Co. Ltd. vs.
Southpart Corporation 1956 Ac
218 at 228-229)”
In my view when the trial
magistrate granted the alternate
relief of damages, he was not
proprio motuo substituting a
case different from, contrary to
or inconsistent with the
respondent claim or case. He
was not making the same mistake
as the trial judge in Adumong
vs. Kumah 1989 – 90 GLR 283. In
that case the judge proprio
motuo invoked the provisions of
the Contract Act in favour of a
defendant whose only defence he
had set up when sued in his
capacity as a guarantor was that
he signed the loan agreement not
as such guarantor but merely as
a witness. It was held, with
the judgment of the court being
delivered by the President of
this court as presently
constituted, that (at page 288)
“Since the second defendant did
not expressly plead Act 25 in
his statement of defence, it was
fundamentally wrong for the
learned judge to invoke the
provisions of that Act to non
suit the plaintiff”
What the trial magistrate did in
this instant case was to
exercise the power inherent in
him to give to the respondent
that which on the facts they
presented at the trial in law
they were legally and purely
entitled to even though they did
not specifically apply for that
in the alternative. It would
have been a grave miscarriage of
justice if the court have non
suited with the excuse that he
did not endorse his writ for
that judicial relief. In any
case the magic lies in the
endorsement on the writ then my
humble view in that to do
justice to the parties this
court in any case would have
power to amend the endorsement
to include this alternative
relief in order that we
determine the real matters in
controversy between the parties
and so do real justice. A court
which acts under the
circumstances the trial
magistrate did, awarding damages
at law, when only the equitable
relief of specific performance
had been prayed for, would not
be acting contrary to Dam vs.
Addo (supra) indeed. The sale
of Goods Act 137 gives statutory
recognition to the remedy open
to a buyer of goods in the 3
event of non-delivery. The
section reads:
“S. 53 where the seller
wrongfully neglects or refuses
to deliver the goods to the
buyer in accordance with the
terms of the contract or where
the buyer rejects the goods
delivered by the seller having
the right so to do, the buyer
may maintain an action against
the seller for damages
non-delivery.”
In this instant case, therefore
when the trial court found, as I
do also find, that specific
performance is a most
inappropriate remedy, his duty,
in the face of the overwhelming
evidence that the respondent had
suffered loss as a result of the
non delivery was to grant the
most appropriate at the law, and
that in my view is damages. On
the other order of the appellant
High Court Judge that “he should
go to the market and buy similar
chairs at the current cost”
rather unknown in law.
Both under the statute and at
common law he is entitled to
recover damages for the losses
which could reasonably have been
foreseen by the seller at the
time when the contract was made
as likely to result from his
breach of contract.
He should be entitled to the
contract money paid and so also
interest thereon. He should
also be able to recover special
damages if specifically pleaded
and proved. In the absence of a
specific plea for special
damages nothing should stop the
court from using what ever was
not pleaded but nonetheless
proved in evidence as evidence
special damages in assessing the
general damages he is entitled
to, for the rule is that in case
of non delivery he is entitled
also to recover damages for
consequential losses made
necessary by the breach. In
this connection, we have
unchallenged evidence from
respondent showing trips he or
his driver made to Takoradi to
take delivery of the chairs.
The mode of assessment is as
prescribed under S.54 (2) of Act
137. The details in respect of
quantum have been perfectly done
by my two learned brothers. I
would thus have nothing useful
to add. In conclusion the
appeal ought to fail.
G.T. WOOD (MRS.)
JUSTICE OF APPEAL.
BROBBEY, JA.
I am also of the view that for
the reasons stated in the
judgment of my brother Lamptey
JA., the appeal fails and should
be dismissed.
S. A. BROBBEY
JUSTICE OF APPEAL.
COUNSEL
B. ODURO FOR RESPONDENT.
ESSIEN FOR APPELLANT. |