Skip to main content

UNSW Law Book Forum: ‘Contractual Penalties in Australia and the United Kingdom'

26 March 2020
5.30pm – 7.30pm AEDT
UNSW Book Shop Quadrangle Building, E15 Kensington Campus, UNSW Sydney
This event has ended
Contractual Penalties in Australia and the United Kingdom

EVENT POSTPONED: In response to instructions by the Australian Federal Government due to COVID-19, UNSW Sydney is cancelling all non-teaching live events until further notice. 
Author: Dr Nicholas Tiverios

Chair: Professor Prue Vines, UNSW Law

Discussants:

Professor William Gummow AC, Former Justice of the High Court of Australia, University of Sydney Law School

The Hon Justice Paul Brereton, Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales

Dr David Winterton, University of Sydney Law School

About the book

From the Foreword by the Hon Justice James Edelman, High Court of Australia:

"The detailed doctrinal and philosophical analysis in Contractual Penalties in Australia and the United Kingdom makes it a book for scholars who want to understand the historical, conceptual, and moral foundations of the prohibition against contractual penalties. But its clear and concise style and its chapters and sections concerning the practical application of a doctrine based upon slippery foundations also make it essential reading for all commercial lawyers in Australia and England."

It is a longstanding and common drafting technique in Australia and England for contracts to contain an agreed remedy which one party (A) can claim against the other (B) if B fails to fulfil her side of the bargain. This book aims to provide a comprehensive answer to a vital question that affects consumer, commercial and government contracting: when will a court refuse to enforce A’s right to an agreed remedy because it impermissibly punishes B? In doing so, this book seeks to provide readers with:

• a detailed and accessible guide as to how the penalties doctrine operates in practice, taking account of the growing body of case law following the landmark decisions in Andrews v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd; Paciocco v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd; Cavendish Square Holding BV v Makdessi; and ParkingEye Ltd v Beavis;

• a historical overview of the key developments in the law of penalties from the 14th century to the present day which links historical analysis with modern debates concerning the scope of the penalties doctrine;

• a clear overview of the potential underlying reasons for the law of penalties in both England and Australia which accounts for the key divergences between the jurisdictions;

• a comprehensive comparative analysis between the English and Australian penalties doctrines, showing sharp divergences between the approaches adopted in these two jurisdictions notwithstanding that the jurisdictions share a common historical starting point; and

• a quick reference guide to assist legal practitioners in identifying potentially contentious issues that may arise from the application of the penalties doctrine.

https://www.bookshop.unsw.edu.au/details.cgi?ITEMNO=9781760022143