
‘Intention to Create Legal Relations’: A Contractual Necessity or An Illusory Concept129
was a perfectly vegetarian pizza according to Singapo-
rean experience. Notably, both the Indian and the hotel
owner were willing to perform the contractual obligation
but both had different perceptions of a vegetarian pizza.
How will the contract law theories or the courts enforc-
ing contract law principles deal with such situations is
not very clear.
The very justifications for not enforcing the familial
contracts, as provided by courts in various cases, are
based on fallacious premises. In Balfour case [6], Lord
Atkin stated that domestic contracts are not contracts as
the parties did not intend that they should be attended by
legal consequences. But this applies even to the comer-
cial transactions like in the coffee case illustrated earlier.
Many a times the parties do not contemplate legal con-
sequences unless the other party commits breach.
However, with the changing times and changing di-
mensions of familial relations, this attitude towards so-
cial agreements seems to have changed. Freeman classi-
fies Balfour v Balfour [6] as a ‘Victorian Marriage’ and
sees the marriage of today ‘less regulated’ and ‘more
dependent upon individual choice.’ For him ‘Marriage
has become a ‘personal rather than a social institution.’’
He pleads for a change in the treatment of presumptions
in domestic spheres [7].
Noteworthy, there are many laws which interfere in
domestic relations between parties and thereby witness
the most personal arrangement which the human beings
try to protect from outside intervention. Legislations re-
garding Family Law, Divorce Act, Succession Act, etc,
are some illustrative pieces of legislation. Considering
the changing nature of domestic/social relations, the
court should not differentiate the inten tion that th e parties
had in mind while dealing in their personal or commer-
cial matters. Therefore, the traditional practice of shifting
burden of rebuttal of the presumption of ‘intention to
create legal relations’ in such contracts is unreasonable
and lacks justifiable ba sis.
Relational contract theorists argue that commercial re-
lationships ‘are not governed by contractual intentions,
but reflect a variety of influences, including social norms
and the norms of conduct that develop within the rela-
tionship’ [8 ]. More often than not, the parties d o provide
for, in detail, all the contractual terms and consequences
that will flow from a particular transaction. In su ch cases
it is grossly unreasonable to go in to the question of what
the parties intended at the time they entered into a con-
tract. In both types of arrangements, domestic as well as
commercial, asking what the parties intended at the time
of contracting may be ‘an utterly unreal question, since
in all probab ility the parties did not con sider the question
at the time of the inception of the agreement’ [9].
In both commercial and family arrangements, rela-
tional contract theory indicates that the parties are more
concerned with the preservation of ongoing relationships
than with the availability o f legal san ctions. In bo th types,
at the outset of the arrangements the parties may not sub-
jectively consider it likely that contract law will control
or regulate their arrangements. They may instead rely on
social or relational norms to do the job. Relational re-
searchers have demonstrated that in business relation-
ships, as well as family relationships, ‘co-operation with-
out reference to legal entitlements is normal’ [10]. In
both commercial and family agreements, the long-term
nature of the relationship and related agreement impedes
the ability to settle finally all terms at the time of co ntract
formation. Therefore, to draw a demarcation on the basis
of different intention prevailing in the minds of the par-
ties is ill founded.
Analysing the changing scenario prevailing in modern
day domestic set up and considering the drastic trans-
formation in the way people perceive their relationships,
it is apparent that dividing line between the domestic and
commercial contracts is shrinking. People are becoming
more and more commercial even in familial relatio ns and
security of transaction is becoming a matter of priority.
In such situation the legal requirement of the parties’
intention to be contractually bound continues to impede
the enforcement of family contracts. The distinction be-
tween commercial contracts, which are presumptively
enforceable, and family contracts, in which intention
must be proved, cannot be justified. The very reasons for
which the different presumptive in tention theory evolved
between commercial and domestic contracts become
otiose. If the requirements of consideration and agree-
ment are thought to be inadequate to distinguish enfor-
ceable from unenforceable arrangements, then a more
appropriate method needs to be devised to achieve this
purpose than one which is ostensibly focused on a ficti-
tious inquiry as to party intention, and which actually
masks an anachronistic and inappropriate judicial senti-
ment [11].
3. Intention: Objective or Subjective
After focussing on different theories of why contracts are
enforced and then placing ‘intention to create legal rela-
tions’ in each of those theories, the next discussion
should aim at analysing various standards (objective and
subjective) used b y Eng lish Courts while finding wheth er
such intention exists or not. This part of the paper will
examine the different approaches employed by courts
while dealing with the issue of ‘intention’ in any particu-
lar contract. What intention do the courts take into ac-
ccount while dealing with different situations before
them—the ‘subjective’ intention or the ‘objective’ inten-
tion? In Merritt v. Merritt [12], Lord Denning held “…
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