Conditions and Warranties Under Contract Law in Ghana: Meaning, Differences, and Legal Effects

1. INTRODUCTION: CLASSIFICATION OF CONTRACTUAL TERMS

Contractual terms are classified according to the legal effect of their breach. The classification determines the remedies available to the innocent party.

There are three main categories:

  1. Conditions
  2. Warranties
  3. Innominate or intermediate terms

The law does not merely focus on the label used by parties. Courts examine the substance and effect of the term.

2. CONDITIONS

Meaning of Conditions

condition is a fundamental term of the contract. It goes to the root or core purpose of the agreement.

A breach of a condition:

  1. Entitles the innocent party to terminate the contract
  2. Releases the innocent party from further performance
  3. Allows the innocent party to sue for damages

Without performance of a condition, the contract cannot achieve its intended purpose.

Illustration

If a buyer orders a refrigerated truck to transport frozen fish and the seller supplies an ordinary truck, the refrigeration requirement is a condition. The buyer may reject the truck and terminate the contract.

Hasnem Enterprises v IBM World Trade Corporation

Facts Explained

The plaintiffs purchased a photocopier from the defendants. Over the years, the defendants serviced the machine free of charge under an exclusive maintenance arrangement.

However, the plaintiffs:

  1. Failed to settle outstanding payments
  2. Allowed a third party to service the machine

When the machine broke down again, the defendants refused to service it. The plaintiffs sued.

Legal Issue

Whether the defendants were liable for refusing to continue servicing the machine.

Court’s Reasoning

The court held that:

  • Payment of outstanding bills was an essential obligation
  • Exclusive servicing was a core term
  • The plaintiffs breached these essential terms first

The breach went to the root of the contract and entitled the defendants to treat the contract as repudiated.

Decision

The defendants were not liable.

Principle Established

Where a party breaches a condition, the innocent party may terminate the contract and refuse further performance.

3. SOCIAL SECURITY BANK LTD v CBAM SERVICES INC

Facts Explained

CBAM negotiated a worldwide money transfer service for Social Security Bank. Under the contract:

  • CBAM was responsible for advertising
  • All promotional materials required prior written approval
  • SSB could terminate on three months’ notice for breach

CBAM carried out advertising without written approval. SSB terminated the agreement. CBAM sued.

Legal Issue

Whether failure to obtain prior written approval was a breach of condition justifying termination.

Court’s Reasoning

The court held that not every breach allows termination. Only breaches that:

  1. Go to the root of the contract
  2. Make further performance impossible
  3. Affect the substance of the agreement

qualify as conditions.

The court found that the failure to obtain approval was not fundamental.

Decision

Termination was wrongful. CBAM succeeded.

Principle Established

Courts determine whether a term is a condition by examining the effect and seriousness of the breach, not merely the wording of the contract.

  1. STANBAY LTD V ANGLOGOLD ASHANTI GHANA       

Facts in Full       

The defendants terminated a contract with the plaintiff citing unsatisfactory performance and delays. The plaintiffs therefore sued that the termination of the contract was in breach of contractual terms. The defendants argued that the plaintiff was in breach of the contract by reason of the delay in completion of the project. 

Court’s Reasoning

The court held that where a contract stipulates a time frame as essential, failure to complete the project within that time constitutes a breach. 

4. WARRANTIES

Meaning of Warranties

warranty is a subsidiary or minor contractual term.

A breach of warranty:

  1. Does not terminate the contract
  2. Does not discharge the innocent party
  3. Only entitles the innocent party to damages

The contract continues despite the breach.

Illustration

If a car dealer promises free car mats and fails to provide them, the buyer cannot reject the car but can claim compensation.

Neoplan (Ghana) Ltd v Harmony Construction Co. Ltd

A warranty term of a contract which was collateral to the main purpose of the contract, that is, which is not so vital as to effect a discharge of the contract, if the circumstances are or become inconsistent with it. 

Wallis, Son & Wells v Pratt & Haynes

Facts Explained

The plaintiffs purchased seeds described as “common English sainfoin”. The contract excluded warranties regarding quality and description.

After resale, the seeds were discovered to be a different variety called “giant sainfoin”. The plaintiffs were sued by sub-buyers and then sued the defendants.

Legal Issue

Whether supplying wrong seeds breached a condition or warranty.

Court’s Reasoning

The court held that correspondence with description of goods is a fundamental obligation. The disclaimer of warranties could not exclude liability for breach of condition under sale of goods law.

Decision

The defendants were liable.

Principle Established

Conditions relating to description of goods cannot be downgraded to warranties by mere contractual wording.

5. INNOMINATE OR INTERMEDIATE TERMS

Meaning

Innominate terms are contractual obligations whose classification depends on the consequences of the breach, not on pre-labelling.

The court examines:

  • Severity of the breach
  • Impact on the contract
  • Extent of deprivation suffered

Legal Effect

If breach produces serious consequences, the term is treated as a condition.
If breach produces minor consequences, the term is treated as a warranty.

Illustration

Delay in delivery may be trivial or catastrophic depending on commercial context.

6. IMPLIED TERMS

Courts sometimes imply terms into contracts where justice and commercial necessity require it.

However, courts are cautious. They do not rewrite contracts.

There are three main sources of implied terms:

  1. Implied by courts
  2. Implied by custom
  3. Implied by statute

TERMS IMPLIED BY COURTS: BUSINESS EFFICACY

The Moorcock (1889)

Facts Explained

The defendants owned a wharf. The plaintiff’s ship docked there for loading and unloading. At low tide, the ship rested on hard ground beneath the mud and was damaged.

The plaintiff sued alleging an implied term that the berth was safe.

Court’s Reasoning

The court held that the contract would be meaningless without an implied obligation that the berth was reasonably safe.

Decision

Damages were awarded.

Principle Established

Courts will imply terms necessary to give business efficacy to a contract.

Ghanaian Authority: Atuwo v AGIP Ghana Ltd

Facts Explained

The plaintiff’s employment was terminated due to redundancy. He claimed the contract implied guaranteed long-term employment.

Court’s Reasoning

The court held that necessity, not fairness, governs implied terms. There was no basis for implying guaranteed employment.

Decision

Termination was lawful.

7. TERMS IMPLIED BY CUSTOM

Meaning

Where parties contract within a known trade or profession, courts may imply customary terms if the usage is:

  1. Well known
  2. Certain
  3. Reasonable
  4. Consistent with the contract

Quartey v Norgah

Facts Explained

The plaintiff claimed cattle under customary breeding practice. He failed to prove the existence of the alleged custom.

Decision

The claim failed.

Principle Established

Custom must be strictly proven before courts will imply it.

8. TERMS IMPLIED BY STATUTE

Certain statutes automatically imply terms into contracts.

Examples include:

  • Sale of Goods Act 1962
  • Hire Purchase Act
  • Lands Act

Statutory implied terms override private agreements.

9. STANDARD FORM CONTRACTS AND EXCLUSION CLAUSES

Meaning

Standard form contracts contain pre-drafted terms including limitation and exclusion clauses.

Courts scrutinise such clauses because of inequality of bargaining power.

Enforcement of Exclusion Clauses

Courts apply strict rules:

  1. Reasonable notice must be given
  2. Clause must be brought to attention before contract formation
  3. Clause must be clear and legible
  4. Clause must be part of contractual document
  5. Prior consistent dealings may bind parties

Inusah v DHL Worldwide Express

Facts Explained

DHL limited liability to USD 100. The plaintiff signed the form and later sued for higher damages.

Decision

The court enforced the exclusion clause.

Principle Established

Signed and clear exclusion clauses are enforceable if fair and reasonable.

10. CONCLUSION

Classification of contractual terms determines the remedies available. Ghanaian courts balance:

  • Contractual freedom
  • Commercial certainty
  • Consumer protection
  • Fairness

Understanding conditions, warranties, innominate terms, implied terms, and exclusion clauses is essential for both litigation and contract drafting.

SUMMARY TABLE

CategoryEffect of BreachRemedyAuthority
ConditionFundamental breachTermination + damagesHasnem v IBM
WarrantyMinor breachDamages onlyWallis v Pratt
Innominate termDepends on consequencesCase dependentGeneral principle
Implied by courtBusiness necessityEnforceableMoorcock
Implied by customTrade practiceEnforceable if provenQuartey v Norgah
Implied by statuteMandatory termsAutomaticSale of Goods Act
Exclusion clauseLimits liabilityStrict scrutinyInusah v DHL

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