History of English contract law

The history of English contract law traces back to its roots in civil law, the lex mercatoria and the industrial revolution. Modern English contract law is composed primarily of case law decided by the English courts following the Judicature Acts and supplemented by statutory reform. However, a significant number of legal principles were inherited from recording decisions reaching back to the aftermath of the Norman Invasion.

Civil law

  • Plato, The Laws
  • Roman law and pacta sunt servanda
  • Corpus Juris Civilis

Norman England

  • Common law
  • Courts of Chancery
  • Forms of action

The Lex Mercatoria's reception

Freedom of contract

Covenant

Furrer v Snelling, 1 Rolle 335, 3 Bulstrode 155, Jenk 324, case 38, Michalmass 13 Jac B R, is a contracts and property case, in English law.[1] The case established the ratio that in covenant only damages are recoverable.[2] A tenant entered a covenant for payment of rent of £20 per annum, for 4½ years. However, the case was brought for non-payment of £100 which the plaintiff claimed for the rent. The judge found that "in covenant damages only are to be recovered and this surplus in miscomputing shall be abated", and "where more is demanded than is due... the debt only, is to be recovered".[1]

Modern regulation

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Furrer v Snelling 145 ER 235
  2. ^ Charles Viner. A General Abridgment of Law and Equity: Alphabetically Digested. G G J and J Robinson. 1793. Volume 15. Page 403.

References

Articles
  • F Kessler, 'Contracts of Adhesion—Some Thoughts About Freedom of Contract (1943) 43(5) Columbia Law Review 629
  • MJ Horwitz, 'The historical foundations of modern contract law' (1974) 87(5) Harvard Law Review 917
  • AWB Simpson, 'The Horwitz Thesis and the History of Contracts' (1979) 46(3) The University of Chicago Law Review 533
Books