
Deliberately avoiding condition fulfilment is not a 'get of contract free' cardA party cannot deliberately prevent a condition precedent from being fulfilled and then use that failure to escape its contractual obligations. ![]() Image source: Freepik The English Court of Appeal confirmed this in King Crude Carriers SA v Ridgebury November, and the principle has direct relevance to any international commercial contract your company concludes where payment, performance, or enforceability depends on a condition precedent being met. What happenedTwo ship sale agreements required the buyers to pay deposits. Payment was conditional on opening a designated account, for which the buyers had to provide identification and supporting documents "without delay". The buyers deliberately withheld those documents, the account was never opened, and the deposits were never paid. The sellers terminated both agreements and claimed the unpaid deposits as a debt. The Tribunal and the High Court initially found against the sellers on the basis that the condition precedent had not been satisfied, so no liability ever arose. The Court of Appeal disagreed and reversed those decisions. What the court decidedThe Court of Appeal held that a party cannot rely on its own breach to avoid a debt obligation. It applied the principle of deemed fulfilment — where a party's conduct prevents a condition from being met, the condition may be treated as fulfilled, or simply set aside, so that the obligation it was attached to remains enforceable. Three elements must be present for this principle to apply:
If all three are present, the party entitled to the debt can enforce it, even if the other side's breach caused the condition to fail. The buyers argued that the remedy should be limited to damages. The court rejected this, holding that the deposit was a forfeitable sum tied to intended performance, not compensation. The obligation to open the account was an administrative step that could not be weaponised to defeat the agreed commercial arrangement. Why this matters for your contractsThis decision is a useful reminder that conditions precedent are not escape routes. Courts will look at who controlled the condition and whether that party acted in good faith to fulfil it. What you should do:
About the authorNikita Lalla is the Chief Executive and Ricardo Pillay, a Director, at LnP Beyond Legal. |