The Satanita
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| The Satanita | |
|---|---|
Valkyrie II, the victim of The Satanita | |
| Court | House of Lords |
| Full case name | Clarke v Earl of Dunraven |
| Citation | [1897] AC 59 |
| Case history | |
| Prior action | [1895] P 248 |
| Keywords | |
| Offer and acceptance, rules of game | |
The Satanita [1897] AC 59 is an English contract law case, decided in the Court of Appeal, which concerned the formation of a contract. It is notable because it stands as an example of a case which does not fit the typical pattern of offer and acceptance that English law purports to require to find agreement.
Lord Dunraven, owner of the Valkyrie II, and A.D. Clarke, owner of the American vessel Satanita, each entered their yachts in a race in the Firth of Clyde organised by the Mudhook Yacht Club. Each agreed to the rules, one of which was that rule breakers were liable for all consequential damage, displacing the statutory position that a defendant's liability is limited. On 5 July 1894, the Satanita collided with Lord Dunraven's yacht, injuring a crewmember ("The unfortunate man was a seaman named Brown, one of whose legs was broken"[1]) and causing it to sink.