Hambros Bank Ltd v British Historic Buildings Trust and Din
Language: English Series: New Property Cases ; [1995] NPC 179, (2)Publication details: 1995Subject(s): Summary: CA 23 November 1995. A party seeking to establish a `non est factum` who can show that he is illiterate must also, if he is to succeed, show that he believed the document he was executing to be fundamentally different from what he believed it to be, and that he exercised proper care. A party who does not enquire as to the true nature of the contract he is executing will not be able to maintain `non est factum`. (taken from case heading). NOTE:- NO PHOTOCOPYING ALLOWED.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Law report | London Journal article | X2847 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 26811-1001 |
CA 23 November 1995. A party seeking to establish a `non est factum` who can show that he is illiterate must also, if he is to succeed, show that he believed the document he was executing to be fundamentally different from what he believed it to be, and that he exercised proper care. A party who does not enquire as to the true nature of the contract he is executing will not be able to maintain `non est factum`. (taken from case heading). NOTE:- NO PHOTOCOPYING ALLOWED.