Misrepresentation, 2010:
Duty and public notice in the UK, PLC
The audited financial statement prepared by Bumble & Co, on behalf of Horizon PLC 'made public' the performance of the corporation: reporting earnings of £10 million. Where published, shareholders and other stakeholders may 'assume' official and final writing according to the Statute of Frauds, which stipulates that public notice of the company's profit and loss constitutes reliability to the shareholders and other stakeholders, and assumes that those parties are in agreement to those activities. Analysis of Horizon, Plc v. Bumble & Co. will be subject to decision based on UK laws on Misrepresentation and unfair commercial practices under the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive 2005/29/EC ("UCPD") which came into force 26 May 2008. The 2008 law on misrepresentation is preceded by the UK Misrepresentation Act of 1967 (OPSI, 1991).
Preface to the discussion is what rule elements are not at play within the fact pattern presented in Horizon, Plc v. Bumble & Co., or related matters to the case. There are no known third party, intermediated securities firms involved in the foregoing review of the rights of the investors, the role and obligations of the issuer, and the defense of the accounting firm (Gullifer and Payne 2010). Preliminary to examination of the case, acts of 'false statements' as defined by UK Law do not appear to be present. There is also no intentional deceit. Where cases of such public profit and loss reporting deemed detrimental to shareholder parties are defined by those directives, in articulation of the conditions and terms of stock purchase agreements (Beale, Fauvarque-Cosson, and Rutgers et al. 2010).
Laws on Misrepresentation cover most of the legal decision on Horizon, Plc v. Bumble & Co. And stipulate that Horizon, Plc, the misrepresentee pursuer, "must still establish his case in negligence." This is also substance to decision on merchant to merchant transactions, where public notice about Plc holdings consitute delictual liability for negligence that the misrepresentor defender has breached a pre-existing duty of care which he owed the pursuer (Misrepresentation and unfair commercial practices, 2008). It is also suggests that the rule does not apply to external parties not represented by the misrepresentor and misrepresentee or parties to the same contract. This excludes obligation by individuals as 'employees' to those misrepresented parties, where personal liability to the complaint is not determined. Section 9 to the law on Misrepresentation defines the measure of damages in the case of 'both fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation is the usual measure for delictual damages;' and where as illustrated in Table 1.
Table 1
10. Fraudulent, the consumer may recover all losses arising directly from the transaction irrespective of foreseeability.In such circumstances, an award of damages may include the losses which the consumer has incurred as a result in a drop in market value of the asset involved in the transaction.
11. Negligent, the measure of damages is dependent upon whether the misrepresentation took the form of advice or the provision of information. If the misrepresentor advised the misrepresentee to take a course of action, liability is for all foreseeable loss incurred as a result of that course of action; such liability may include losses incurred as a result of external factors. Whereas if the misrepresentor merely provided information, liability is limited to the foreseeable consequences of that information being wrong.
Table 1. Sections 10 & 11 (Misrepresentation and unfair commercial practices, UK 2008).
Enforceability of the contract between Bumble & Co. And Horizon is a merchant agreement, falling under the scope of the UK contract law where accounting services are considered in the scope of professional practice attributed to accountants and other service providers such as physicians, where licensure circumscribes contractual obligations of the professional party to 'duty;' and specifically to 'duty to a reasonable standard of care' in part to the promise to performance.
In cases where the professional party has not upheld duty and the result is a measurable and material liability to the defendant, negligence may be found. Forewarning of risks and release from liability to incorrect reporting in error by Bumble & Co., may protect the firm from apportioned liability where it is found that Horizon would have sustained losses in spite of reporting, yet this is unlikely given the reliance that the company and its current and near future shareholders like Allison will have on the final legal writing and its public notice.
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