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Bayley v Bayley [1921] 2 KB 227

On 29 March 1922, the Court of the King’s Bench delivered Bayley v Bayley [1921] 2 KB 227.

The court considered whether or not allowances and command pay, paid to a major in the army over and above regimental pay, were “pay” within the meaning of an award under a divorce settlement.

An arbitrator had awarded the defendant, Major Bayley, to make monthly payments to the plaintiff, Mrs Bayley, for a certain sum of money and that “should Major Bayley’s pay reach 400l. per annum he is to pay to Mrs. Bayley 10l. per month,….should Major Bayley’s pay reach 500l. per annum he is to pay Mrs Bayley 12l. per month, should Major Bayley’s pay exceed 500l. per annum these monthly payments are to be increased by 25 per cent. of the resulting excess over 500l. per annum.”

Pursuant to royal warrants issued under the prerogative of the crown, the defendant received “Regimental Pay and Additional Pay” of 16s per day as a major and “Command Pay” of 5s per day for being “in actual command of depots, of camps of instruction, of regiments or battalions, of detachments of regiments or corps, or of mixed bodies of troops”. Under separate regulations, the defendant also received allowances.

McCardie J held that the allowances were not considered to be pay within the meaning of the award (at 230).

McCardie J held that the Regimental Pay and the Command Pay was considered be pay within the meaning of the award (at 229).

With respect to the Command Pay, McCardie J found (at 231):

“In my opinion “command pay” is distinct in substance and fact from mere allowances. It is “pay” in the true sense. It is a definite financial remuneration for discharging the duties of a definite rank. I think that it falls within the fair meaning of the word “pay” as used in the award.”

His Honour considered the cases of Goodwin v Sheffield Corporation [1902] 1 KB 629 and Upperton v Ridley [1901] 1 KB 384. In Goodwin v Sheffield Corporation, free use of fuel, gas and water was not considered to be part of a police officer’s pay. Channell J said ‘pay’ is a technical word having a very technical meaning – that is, the amount fixed by the scale of pay”.

In Upperton v Ridley, a police officer had received 1s per day in addition to his ordinary pay to attend permanently on special duty at the House of Lords. It was held that the extra remuneration was not part of his “pay” for the calculation of his pension as “the police commissioners were under no obligation to pay the appellant the additional 7s a week while he was on special service, but that the payment was made partly as a recognition of good conduct and partly because, by being withdrawn from ordinary duty, the appellant to some extent lost his chance of promotion”.

After considering Goodwin and Upperton, McCardie said: “In the present case the defendant as a commanding officer became entitled to a definite, well-known and substantially permanent remuneration under the express provisions of the royal warrants” (at 232).

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Amalgamated Society of Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd (“Engineers’ case”) [1920] HCA 54

ON 31 AUGUST 1920, the High Court of Australia delivered Amalgamated Society of Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd (“Engineers’ case”) [1920] HCA 54; (1920) 28 CLR 129 (31 August 1920).

Prior to the Engineers’ case, the High Court had held that the States had reserved powers and their instrumentalities were immune from Commonwealth interference. In the Engineers Case, the High Court held that, through a literal interpretation of the Constitution, the Commonwealth Parliament has the power to make laws with respect to conciliation and arbitration, allowing the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration to regulate the wages and conditions of employees of the State of Western Australia.

The case is significant because of the High Court’s adoption of a literal approach to constitutional interpretation. Per Higgins at 161-2:

“The fundamental rule of interpretation, to which all others are subordinate, is that a statute is to be expounded according to the intent of the Parliament that made it; and that intention has to be found by an examination of the language used in the statute as a whole. The question is, what does the language mean; and when we find what the language means, in its ordinary and natural sense, it is our duty to obey that meaning, even if we consider the result to be inconvenient or impolitic or improbable.”

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Mallinson v Scottish Australian Investment Company Limited [1920] HCA 51

ON 26 AUGUST 1920, the High Court of Australia delivered Mallinson v Scottish Australian Investment Co Ltd [1920] HCA 51; (1920) 28 CLR 66 (26 August 1920).

An employee is entitled to recover the moneys payable to him or her under an award, even if there is no independent express agreement regarding those moneys under their employment contract.

Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW)

ON 1 JULY 1920, the NSW Conveyancing Act 1919 commenced.

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/nsw/consol_act/ca1919141/

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R v Smith (“Brides in the Bath case”) (1915) 11 CR App R 229

ON 13 AUGUST 1916, the Court of Criminal Appeal delivered R v Smith (1915) 11 Cr App R 229.

The defendant was accused of murdering his wife, Bessie Munday, who was found dead at home in her bath. Evidence of the death of two subsequent wives in similar circumstances was held to be admissible as it was improbable that three different women would have accidentally drowned in the bath given that their deaths occurred not long after entering marriage and financial arrangements under which which the accused would stand to benefit if they died.

Smith’s appeal was unsuccessful. He was convicted and hanged on 13 August 1916.

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1914 | Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914

ON 15 OCTOBER 1914, the United States enacted the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914.

Lawyer
Peter O’Grady
BA, LLB, Grad Cert Leg Prac, Acc Spec Lawyer

 

Federal Trade Commission Act

ON 26 SEPTEMBER 1914, the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914 (15 U.S.C §§ 41-58, as amended) was signed into law by US President Woodrow Wilson.

http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/15/chapter-2/subchapter-I

Lawyer
Peter O’Grady
BA, LLB, Grad Cert Leg Prac, Acc Spec Lawyer

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Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage & Motor Co Ltd [1914] UKHL 1

ON 1 JULY 1914, the House of Lords delivered Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage & Motor Co Ltd [1915] AC 79; [1914] UKHL 1 (1 July 1914).

http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1914/1.html

Liquidated sum clauses are valid and enforceable under contract law; penalty clauses are not. A liquidated sum is a genuine estimate of the losses from a breach; a penalty frightens or deters a party from breach.

A court will construe a clause to be a penalty if:

  • It is extravagant or unconscionable.
  • It is greater than the money payable for a breach for failure to pay money.

A court will presume a clause to be a penalty if it is for a single lump sum payable in the occurrence of one or multiple events, some of which may only warrant minimal damages.

A court will presume a clause to be liquidated if the consequences of a breach are hard or impossible to estimate as it is probable that the pre-estimated damage was the true bargain between the parties.

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Addis v Gramophone Co Ltd [1909] UKHL 1

ON 26 JULY 1909, the House of Lords delivered Addis v Gramophone Co Ltd [1909] UKHL 1, [1909] AC 488.

http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1909/1.html

The decision is notable for establishing the general principle that damages for breach of contract do not cover injured feelings, mental anxiety, distress, anguish or frustration.

In cases of wrongful or unfair dismissal, damages are limited to lost earnings during the period of notice and are not to compensate the manner of dismissal; loss of reputation; difficulty of finding other employment; or injured feelings, mental anxiety, distress, anguish or frustration.

Damages for breach of contract are compensatory and the court may not award exemplary damages.

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Swiss Civil Code

ON 10 DECEMBER 1907, Switzerland introduced the Swiss Civil Code.

Click to access 210.en.pdf

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Sydney, Australia

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