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The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law

The rules regulating corporate representation relating to the conclusion of contracts have vexed courts for over a century. Even today this area of law is recognised as one of complexity, with the principles of agency, court-made company law doctrines and legislative provisions sitting side by side,...

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Main Author: Van Niekerk, Julian Jesse
Other Authors: Yeats, Jacqueline
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2022
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Van Niekerk, Julian Jesse
author2 Yeats, Jacqueline
author_browse Van Niekerk, Julian Jesse
Yeats, Jacqueline
author_facet Yeats, Jacqueline
Van Niekerk, Julian Jesse
author_sort Van Niekerk, Julian Jesse
collection Thesis
description The rules regulating corporate representation relating to the conclusion of contracts have vexed courts for over a century. Even today this area of law is recognised as one of complexity, with the principles of agency, court-made company law doctrines and legislative provisions sitting side by side, with no sure guide as to their interaction. In South Africa, this sense of uncertainty is particularly acute, given the fact that there is disagreement over the nature of the applicable common law rules, the Companies Act No 71 of 2008 has introduced radical changes into this area of law and our Constitutional Court has recently made pronouncements which have brought settled agency law principles into question. This thesis attempts to lay the groundwork for an understanding of corporate contracting under the Companies Act, taking into account relevant historical, judicial and legislative developments in English and South African law over the last 150 years. In particular, this thesis argues that an approach to corporate contracting which focusses on the third party's perspective, which is rooted in the appearances of (ostensible) authority of the company's representatives, came to dominate over the perspective of the company, which is rooted in the constitutional (actual) authority of its representatives. The implication of this shift has been the gradual de-emphasising of the corporate constitution in relation to corporate contracting. This shift has manifested in both judicial analysis (by courts placing the principles of agency, in particular ostensible authority, at the centre of unauthorised contracting cases) and statutory intervention (by the introduction of sections which expressly make constitutional provisions irrelevant to third parties). Taking into account these developments, it is submitted that the Companies Act has continued the abovementioned trend by introducing sections which further entrench the 'third party perspective' of corporate contracting. Moreover, it is averred that the Companies Act may have overturned case law which limits the protection available to third parties contracting with companies in particular circumstances.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:48:37.195Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Commercial Law
publisherStr Department of Commercial Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36179 The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law Van Niekerk, Julian Jesse Yeats, Jacqueline Commercial Law The rules regulating corporate representation relating to the conclusion of contracts have vexed courts for over a century. Even today this area of law is recognised as one of complexity, with the principles of agency, court-made company law doctrines and legislative provisions sitting side by side, with no sure guide as to their interaction. In South Africa, this sense of uncertainty is particularly acute, given the fact that there is disagreement over the nature of the applicable common law rules, the Companies Act No 71 of 2008 has introduced radical changes into this area of law and our Constitutional Court has recently made pronouncements which have brought settled agency law principles into question. This thesis attempts to lay the groundwork for an understanding of corporate contracting under the Companies Act, taking into account relevant historical, judicial and legislative developments in English and South African law over the last 150 years. In particular, this thesis argues that an approach to corporate contracting which focusses on the third party's perspective, which is rooted in the appearances of (ostensible) authority of the company's representatives, came to dominate over the perspective of the company, which is rooted in the constitutional (actual) authority of its representatives. The implication of this shift has been the gradual de-emphasising of the corporate constitution in relation to corporate contracting. This shift has manifested in both judicial analysis (by courts placing the principles of agency, in particular ostensible authority, at the centre of unauthorised contracting cases) and statutory intervention (by the introduction of sections which expressly make constitutional provisions irrelevant to third parties). Taking into account these developments, it is submitted that the Companies Act has continued the abovementioned trend by introducing sections which further entrench the 'third party perspective' of corporate contracting. Moreover, it is averred that the Companies Act may have overturned case law which limits the protection available to third parties contracting with companies in particular circumstances. 2022-03-22T08:40:07Z 2022-03-22T08:40:07Z 2021 2022-03-22T07:16:27Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36179 eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Van Niekerk, Julian Jesse
The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law
title_full The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law
title_fullStr The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law
title_full_unstemmed The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law
title_short The development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in South African and English Law
title_sort development and reform of the rules regulating authority to contract on behalf of companies in south african and english law
topic Commercial Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36179
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