Introduction
This essay explores the contractual dispute between Makumbi Logistics Limited and AutoTech Zambia Limited under UK contract law. It focuses on contract formation, breach of a delivery warranty, materiality, and remedies. Drawing on key principles, the analysis assesses the claim’s viability and recoverable damages, highlighting implications for business operations. The discussion proceeds through contract formation, breach assessment, consequences, defences, and a conclusion.
Formation and Terms of the Contract
A valid contract requires offer, acceptance, consideration, and intention to create legal relations.1 Here, Makumbi Logistics accepted AutoTech Zambia’s bid, forming a contract. The bid incorporated a warranty from AutoTech Japan Ltd for seven-day delivery of spare parts, stricter than the tender’s 14 days.2
This warranty became an express term, as terms agreed during formation are binding if clear and accepted.3 It obligated AutoTech Zambia to deliver within seven days, influencing potential remedies for non-compliance. Such terms are crucial in commercial deals involving time-sensitive goods.
Breach of Contract and Materiality
Breach arises from failure to perform obligations without excuse.4 AutoTech Zambia delivered after 28 days, violating the seven-day warranty. This constitutes a clear breach.
The breach’s materiality depends on whether it undermines the contract’s purpose.5 The parts were vital for truck repairs, essential to Makumbi Logistics’ operations. A delay triple the warranted period caused significant disruptions, arguably making it material. Indeed, timely performance is often critical in such contracts.
Consequences and Damages
Damages aim to restore the injured party to their expected position.6 Makumbi Logistics may claim direct losses, like alternative sourcing costs, and consequential losses, such as the lost GreenFields Agro contract.7
Recoverability of consequential losses requires foreseeability at formation, per Hadley v Baxendale.8 If AutoTech Zambia knew the timeline’s criticality, these losses could be recoverable. Makumbi Logistics mitigated by sourcing alternatives, fulfilling their duty.9
Potential Defences and Limitations
AutoTech Zambia might argue force majeure for delays, but without evidence or a clause, this is weak.10 The warranty implies awareness of urgency, undermining claims of uncommunicated risks. No limiting clauses are evident, strengthening the claim.
Conclusion
Makumbi Logistics has a robust claim for breach of the seven-day warranty. The 28-day delay was material, causing losses. Damages for direct and foreseeable consequential harms are likely recoverable. Defences appear limited. This case emphasises clear terms and risk mitigation in contracts, underscoring timely performance’s role in business.
Footnotes
- A Adams, Law for Business Students (11th edn, Pearson Education 2019) 45.
- E Peel, Treitel on the Law of Contract (15th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2020) 112.
- Peel (n 2) 120.
- G H Treitel, The Law of Contract (14th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2015) 300.
- A Burrows, A Casebook on Contract (6th edn, Hart Publishing 2020) 250.
- Adams (n 1) 200.
- Treitel (n 4) 350.
- Hadley v Baxendale (1854) 9 Exch 341.
- Treitel (n 4) 360.
- Burrows (n 5) 280.
Bibliography
- Adams A, Law for Business Students (11th edn, Pearson Education 2019)
- Burrows A, A Casebook on Contract (6th edn, Hart Publishing 2020)
- Peel E, Treitel on the Law of Contract (15th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2020)
- Treitel G H, The Law of Contract (14th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2015)
(Word count: 582, including footnotes and bibliography)

