In a contract for services like this one (i.e. advertising) where there are no clear term as to when payment is to be made, court
will imply a term unless the contrary can be shown that payment shall be made before the service is provided. That in any event is
the common commercial practice in this regard. Where in a case like this the service is provided, the service provider is then entitled
to immediately claim his payment. This is because the law of contract is all about enforcing the bargain of the parties. In this case it was the parties bargin that
the Appellant would publish the Respondentfs advert at the charge of Ushs.300,000/= and the Respondent would pay for it. The
advert was published so there was performance, though contested, by the Appellant who wants to be paid.
This area of law was in my view well canvassed by counsel for the Appellant in her submissions in the lower court. She referred the
learned Trial Magistrate to the learned author R.W Hodgin in his book Law of Contract in East Africa Kenya literature bureau 2006 at P. 172 where it is written.
gcif one party has substantially completed his side of the bargain, leaving a minor omission or fault, the court may accept such performance
as discharging his obligations, subject to the innocent partyfs rights to deduct a sum to cover the faultch
This is the principle of substantial performance. The learned Trial Magistrate did not address this argument in her judgment. In this
respect with the greatest of respect I find that she erred.
The learned Trial Magistrate should have treated the claim in the main suit and that in counter-claim separately and not mixed them
up.
If there was dissatisfaction about the advert, which there was, then that would be the subject of the counter-claim.
The learned Trial Magistrate should have found in the main suit, as she did, that the published advert was not paid for and therefore
that amounted to a breach of contract by the Respondent. I therefore find that there was breach of contract by the Respondent by
reason of non payment of advert.
As to whether the counter-claim does raise an opposite breach of contract by the Appellant as well, also has to be looked at. Paragraphs
1 and 3 of the counter-claim allude to a breach by the Appellant by not including gcthe shop number in the advert even after it was brought to their attentionch
Of course during the trial this was widened to include other things which is another ground of appeal in itself; which I will address
a little later on in my judgment.
As to whether the Appellant was in breach of the contract, the learned Trial Magistrate at P. 11 of her judgment found
gc I find that the plaintiff (the present Appellant) was in breach of the contract by not including all the particulars given by the
defendant on the order form as (it) was the every (sic) contract signed by both partiesch
The learned Trial Magistrate interestingly found that the missing particulars in the advert were those provided in the order form
by applying clause 5 of the said order form which is a default clause.
This is because the Appellants in the court below were not able to produce the diskette in court which contained the alleged approved
material for publication by the Respondent. The first Respondent denies receiving any material for approval from the Appellant.
It appears that the learned Trial Magistrate was faced with deciding between the truthfulness of one witnesses word against another.
The absence of the approved material as alleged by the Appellants did not assist their case much.
It was conceded by the Appellants and found as a fact by the learned Trial Magistrate that indeed the Respondentfs shop number
was missing from the advert as pleaded in the counter-claim. Did this omission of the shop number go to the root of contract so as
to render it un payable as counsel for the Respondent would have it? I think not. The adverts at page 13 of the published directory
has the following details;
gPlot 16/18 William Street
Kalungi Plaza Ground Floor
P.O. Box 12309
Kampala - Uganda
Tel: (041) 234779
Mobile (077) 500,963,423,993
h
While that at page 51 has
gPlot 16/18, William Street Kalungi Plaza