Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction

Good faith is arguably the most controversial concept in Australian contract law despite no high court decision deciding its application. The case of Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works (1992) introduced the concept of good faith for the first time by way of obiter comment...

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Main Authors: Nazli, Ismail@Nawang, Nurhidayah, Abdullah, Fatimah, Kari
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: Universiti Putra Malaysia 2015
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Online Access:http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7067/1/FH02-FUHA-16-05466.pdf
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Institution: Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
Language: English
English
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spelling my-unisza-ir.70672022-09-13T05:08:47Z http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7067/ Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction Nazli, Ismail@Nawang Nurhidayah, Abdullah Fatimah, Kari K Law (General) Good faith is arguably the most controversial concept in Australian contract law despite no high court decision deciding its application. The case of Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works (1992) introduced the concept of good faith for the first time by way of obiter comment by Priestley J. In this case, it was argued that good faith is implied by ‘Implication’. The objective of this paper is to analyse the issue of incorporating the concept of good faith in Australian contract law either by way of ‘Implication’ or ‘Construction’. There are two types of implication of a term; ‘implied by fact’ and ‘Implied by law’. This is a library-based research paper and uses a qualitative approach to compare both approaches in implying the concept of good faith. The paper concludes that good faith is easier to identify from the term ‘implied by law’ which is based on the legal incident of a particular class of contract. Universiti Putra Malaysia 2015 Article PeerReviewed text en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7067/1/FH02-FUHA-16-05466.pdf image en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7067/2/FH02-FUHA-17-08431.jpg Nazli, Ismail@Nawang and Nurhidayah, Abdullah and Fatimah, Kari (2015) Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction. Pertanika J. Soc. Sci. & Hum, 23 (S11). pp. 121-130. ISSN 0128-7702
institution Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
building UNISZA Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
content_source UNISZA Institutional Repository
url_provider https://eprints.unisza.edu.my/
language English
English
topic K Law (General)
spellingShingle K Law (General)
Nazli, Ismail@Nawang
Nurhidayah, Abdullah
Fatimah, Kari
Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction
description Good faith is arguably the most controversial concept in Australian contract law despite no high court decision deciding its application. The case of Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works (1992) introduced the concept of good faith for the first time by way of obiter comment by Priestley J. In this case, it was argued that good faith is implied by ‘Implication’. The objective of this paper is to analyse the issue of incorporating the concept of good faith in Australian contract law either by way of ‘Implication’ or ‘Construction’. There are two types of implication of a term; ‘implied by fact’ and ‘Implied by law’. This is a library-based research paper and uses a qualitative approach to compare both approaches in implying the concept of good faith. The paper concludes that good faith is easier to identify from the term ‘implied by law’ which is based on the legal incident of a particular class of contract.
format Article
author Nazli, Ismail@Nawang
Nurhidayah, Abdullah
Fatimah, Kari
author_facet Nazli, Ismail@Nawang
Nurhidayah, Abdullah
Fatimah, Kari
author_sort Nazli, Ismail@Nawang
title Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction
title_short Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction
title_full Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction
title_fullStr Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction
title_full_unstemmed Incorporating the Concept of Good Faith in Australian Contract Law: Implication or Construction
title_sort incorporating the concept of good faith in australian contract law: implication or construction
publisher Universiti Putra Malaysia
publishDate 2015
url http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7067/1/FH02-FUHA-16-05466.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7067/2/FH02-FUHA-17-08431.jpg
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7067/
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