OF A. at any lesser price if the commissioner would not consent to the
original price. The clause provided that the vendor might at his option refuse to sell at such lesser price. The only binding agreement was to sell at the original price and there could be no contract to sell at the lesser price unless and until the vendor agreed to sell at that price, which the defendant never did. Thus the contract became null and void on 21st March 1950. The transaction was past and closed at the date of the proclamation of 23rd March 1950, and the proclamation came too late to have any effect upon the rights of the parties.
The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
McTIERNAN J. In my opinion the appeal should be dismissed.
I have arrived at the conclusion that the contract for the sale of the land at £27,198 7s. 6d. was rendered null and void by the operation of S. 69 of The Profiteering Prevention Act of 1948 (Q.).
Section 67 (1) prohibits any person from purchasing land without the consent of the Commissioner of Prices. The sale for which the contract provided was subject to this provision.
Section 69 provides means for entering into a transaction to which the commissioner's consent is required and for putting an end to the transaction if his consent is refused.
The contract constituted a transaction to which the com- missioner's consent was required. The transaction was a sale at the price of £27,198 7s. 6d., the price upon which the appellant and respondent had agreed.
Clause 1 (a) of the conditions of sale provided that the sale at this price was subject to the commissioner's consent and that if it were refused the sale would be null and void. The insertion of this clause satisfied the requirement of S. 69 (1) (ii). The clause was framed to meet the contingency of the consent of the com- missioner being required to the sale. This consent was required.
Clause 1 (a) brought the transaction of sale at £27, 198 7s. 6d., constituted by the contract, within the operation of S. 69. The clause provided for the possibility of the commissioner's consenting to a sale at a lesser price. There was, however, no agreement for sale at a lesser price than £27,198 7s. 6d.
The commissioner's advice that he consented to the sale of the land at a price " not exceeding £18,000 and his action in returning the contract for consequential amendment amounted to a refusal to consent to the sale at £27,198 7s. 6d., which was the transaction into which the parties entered. The refusal operated, by force of the proviso to S. 69, to make the contract null and void