CBTM05200 –
Misrepresentation: Exception to misrepresentation
Saunders v Anglian Building Society (1971) AC1004
A claimant or representative may state that an incorrectly
completed form with a signed declaration is not a misrepresentation
because the claimant completing the form did not know what they
were doing. This may happen where someone should have been
appointed to run that claimant's affairs, and the claimant
completed the forms in question. That claimant may not then be held
responsible for the completion.
Where it is claimed that a person is not responsible, the
following points must be considered;
- Non-responsibility is limited to those who
are blind, illiterate or do not fully understand a particular form
they have signed. This may be caused by poor education, illness or
inborn incapacity and can be temporary or permanent.
- Poor education, illness or inborn
incapacity alone is not sufficient to show non- responsibility.
People are expected to take reasonable steps to understand what
they sign
- The burden of proof rests with persons who
contend that they are not responsible. Those who are merely content
to sign without taking the trouble to find out the general effect
of the form cannot claim to be non-responsible.
- People may contend that they are not
responsible because, having signed the form, they believe it had
one effect when in fact its effect was quite different. They must
show that they had taken steps or been given information which gave
grounds for the belief and there was a radical, serious or very
substantial difference between what they signed and what they
thought they were signing.
- People are responsible where they were
merely mistaken as to the legal effect of the form, whether the
mistake was their own or that of an advisor.
Non-responsibility may also be referred to as
non est factum, which means, "it is not his
deed".