Misplaced Pages

R v Attorney General for England and Wales

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "R v Attorney General for England and Wales" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

"R" v Attorney General for England and Wales
Privy Council Appeal No. 61 of 2002
CourtJudicial Committee of the Privy Council
Full case name "R", Appellant v. Her Majesty's Attorney-General for England and Wales, Respondent
Decided17 March 2003 (2003-03-17)
Citations UKPC 22, EMLR 499, 2 NZLR 577
Case history
Prior actionsTrial judge ruled that "R" had been subject to undue influence and duress when presented with an agreement for hs signature. Court of Appeal of New Zealand REVERSED IN PART by declining to enjoin against publication by "R" but allowing the Attorney-General to seek damages and recompense for breach of contract.
Appealed fromCourt of Appeal of New Zealand
Case opinions
Judgment of the Court of Appeal of New Zealand UPHELD, their Lordships humbly advised Her Majesty that the appeal should be dismissed. The Attorney-General did not ask for costs.
Decision byLord Hoffman
ConcurrenceLord Bingham of Cornhill
Lord Steyn
Lord Millett
DissentLord Scott of Foscote
Keywords
Duress, undue influence

"R" v Attorney General for England and Wales UKPC 22 is a New Zealand contract law case, heard by the Privy Council acting as the final court of appeal of New Zealand and not as part of the judiciary of the UK, relating to duress and undue influence.

Facts

After the Gulf War, a Special Air Service soldier of the Bravo Two Zero patrol, known in the proceedings as "R", was told to sign a confidentiality agreement or be demoted. He signed. Then he returned to New Zealand. He got a publishing contract for his memoirs, about material in the Gulf War.

The New Zealand Court of Appeal denied an injunction, but allowed an account of profits and an assessment of damages for breach of contract. R appealed to the Privy Council, contending that he was under duress when he signed the contract, given the threat of demotion. Additionally R contended that the contract was signed under undue influence, given the position of the MOD in relation to him.

Advice

The Privy Council advised that the contract was not avoidable for duress. Lord Hoffmann said there was no illegitimate pressure, so no duress. That first element is "pressure amounting to compulsion of the will of the victim and the second was the illegitimacy of the pressure".

Generally speaking, the threat of any form of unlawful action will be regarded as illegitimate. On the other hand, the fact that the threat is lawful does not necessarily make the pressure legitimate. As Lord Atkin said in Thorne v Motor Trade Association AC 797, 806, ‘The ordinary blackmailer normally threatens to do what he has a perfect right to do - namely, communicate some compromising conduct to a person whose knowledge is likely to affect the person threatened… What he has to justify is not the threat, but the demand of money.'

In addition, the court reviewed whether a type of relationship existed between the Crown and the Ministry of Defence that raised the presumption of undue influence. The court found that such a relationship had in law arisen but went on to state that, for this presumption to arise, there must be a transaction that requires explanation. They held that this was not a transaction that required explanation.

See also

Duress cases
Barton v Armstrong
Astley v Reyonds
Skeate v Beale
The Atlantic Baron QB 705
Pao On v Lau Yiu Long
Universe Tankships Inc. of Monrovia v. International Transport Workers' Federation
B&S Contracts and Design Ltd v Victor Green Publications Ltd
Crescendo Management Pty Ltd v Westpact Banking Corp
Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers' Federation
Huyton SA v Peter Cremer GmbH & Co
R v Attorney General for England and Wales
Williams v Bayley
Silsbee v Webber
Mutual Finance Ltd v John Wetton & Sons Ltd
Norreys v Zeffert
English unjust enrichment and unconscionability in English law

References

  1. "R", Appellant v. Her Majesty's Attorney-General for England and Wales, Respondent, UKPC 22, EMLR 499, 2 NZLR 577, accessed 7 January 2021


Stub icon

This article relating to case law in New Zealand is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: