Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors' preface
- Preface
- List of contributors
- Abbreviations
- Note on translations of foreign language statutory provisions
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Case studies
- Case 1 Negotiations for premises for a bookshop
- Case 2 Negotiations for renewal of a lease
- Case 3 Mistake about ownership of land to be sold
- Case 4 An architect's preparatory work for a contract which does not materialise; parallel negotiations
- Case 5 A broken engagement
- Case 6 An express lock-out agreement
- Case 7 Breakdown of merger negotiations
- Case 8 A shopping centre without a tenant
- Case 9 Breakdown of negotiations to build a house for a friend
- Case 10 Public bidding
- Case 11 A contract for the sale of a house which fails for lack of formality
- Case 12 Confidential design information given during negotiations
- Case 13 Misrepresentation or silence about a harvester's capacity
- 3 From the common law to the civil law: the experience of Israel
- 4 A law and economics perspective on precontractual liability
- 5 Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
Case 4 - An architect's preparatory work for a contract which does not materialise; parallel negotiations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors' preface
- Preface
- List of contributors
- Abbreviations
- Note on translations of foreign language statutory provisions
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Case studies
- Case 1 Negotiations for premises for a bookshop
- Case 2 Negotiations for renewal of a lease
- Case 3 Mistake about ownership of land to be sold
- Case 4 An architect's preparatory work for a contract which does not materialise; parallel negotiations
- Case 5 A broken engagement
- Case 6 An express lock-out agreement
- Case 7 Breakdown of merger negotiations
- Case 8 A shopping centre without a tenant
- Case 9 Breakdown of negotiations to build a house for a friend
- Case 10 Public bidding
- Case 11 A contract for the sale of a house which fails for lack of formality
- Case 12 Confidential design information given during negotiations
- Case 13 Misrepresentation or silence about a harvester's capacity
- 3 From the common law to the civil law: the experience of Israel
- 4 A law and economics perspective on precontractual liability
- 5 Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Case 4
A is a manufacturer of computer hardware who wants a new building designed in which to house his operations for the production of hardware. In February he approaches B, a specialist architect, and B begins negotiations with a view to his being engaged as architect for the project. B's policy is not to undertake more than one commission at a time, nor is he prepared to compete in competitive tendering; and in the hope of concluding a contract with A for his services he does preparatory work on plans and specifications for the building he would propose to design, without yet concluding any contract with A. A had also, at the same time, begun negotiations with C, another architect, but did not tell B. A year later, A contracts with C to be the architect on the project, having negotiated with C as well as with B throughout the period. B discovers this only after C's contract with A is concluded. No contract is at any stage concluded between A and B, but B complains that he would never have undertaken the preparatory work (because of his policy on tendering and single-project work) had he known of the negotiations with C. What liability (in contract, tort, restitution, or any other form of liability), if any, does A have to B arising out of A's parallel negotiations? Would it make any difference if A knew of B's policy on tendering and single-project work?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Precontractual Liability in European Private Law , pp. 117 - 139Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009