Ymwadiad: Nid cyngor cyfreithiol yw hwn. Mae deddfwriaeth a chyfraith achosion yn newid. Ymgynghorwch bob amser â chyfreithiwr cymwys ar gyfer eich sefyllfa benodol.

Pob achos
Contract Law
Court of Appeal
1951

Combe v Combe

[1951] 2 KB 215

Ratio Decidendi

Promissory estoppel can only be used as a defence (a shield), not as a cause of action (a sword). It does not create new rights but prevents a party from going back on a promise in certain circumstances.

Ffeithiau

After divorce, the husband promised to pay his ex-wife £100 per year maintenance. He never paid. She did not apply to the court for maintenance, relying on his promise. She then sued on the promise. At first instance, she succeeded on the basis of promissory estoppel.

Crynodeb o'r dyfarniad

The Court of Appeal reversed the decision. Denning LJ held that promissory estoppel, as described in High Trees, could not be used as a cause of action. It was a principle of equity designed to prevent injustice, not to create new causes of action where none existed. The wife's claim failed for want of consideration.

Dyfyniadau allweddol

"The principle does not create new causes of action where none existed before. It only prevents a party from insisting upon his strict legal rights, when it would be unjust to allow him to enforce them."

Denning LJ

Triniaeth ddilynol

Good law

Definitive authority that promissory estoppel operates as a shield, not a sword. Consistently followed.