Joint, several, and joint and several liability

Published by a ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ Commercial expert
Practice notes

Joint, several, and joint and several liability

Published by a ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ Commercial expert

Practice notes
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Contract

Where a contract is made by two or more parties it may contain a promise or obligation made by two or more of those parties. Any such promise may be:

  1. •

    joint

  2. •

    several, or

  3. •

    joint and several

Whether an undertaking is joint, several, or joint and several in contract is a question of construction and is dependent on the intention of the parties as evidenced in the contract. For example, in Rhinegold Publishing v Apex Business Development, statutory demands were served on Rhinegold Ltd, and a related company, Tannhauser Ltd, in the sums of approximately £22,000 and £31,000 respectively. A settlement agreement was subsequently entered into under which the parties agreed to pay the amounts due, but Tannhauser failed to fully do so. Although the settlement agreement was silent on the question of liability, the High Court held that on a proper construction of the agreement, the parties were jointly and severally liable. Rhinegold was therefore required to pay the outstanding sums owed by Tannhauser.

Joint liability

Joint liability arises where

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Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
Key definition:
Joint and several liability definition
What does Joint and several liability mean?

Joint and several liability arises where two or more persons under the same contract make a promise to the same person, and at the same time each of them individually makes the same promise to that same person.

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