Panorama Developments (Guildford) Ltd v Fidelis Furnishing Fabrics Ltd [1971] 2 QB 711 is a UK company law case, concerning the enforceability of obligations against a company.
Fidelisâ company secretary, Mr Bayne, hired cars from Panorama Development's business, Belgravia Executive Car Rental. Bayne used the Fidelis' paper and represented that he wished to hire a number of Rolls-Royce's and Jaguars for the business while his managing director was away. He was lying and he used them himself. Bayne was prosecuted and imprisoned, but Belgravia had outstanding ã570 12s 6d for the hired cars. Fidelis claimed that it was not bound to the hire contracts, because Bayne never had the authority to enter them.
Lord Denning MR held that Fidelis was nevertheless bound on the contract to Panorama. Mr Bayne, as company secretary had implied actual authority by virtue of his position as Company Secretary to enter into such agreements. Times had changed since 1887 when Barnett v South London Tramways Co held that company secretaries could not be assumed to have authority for anything. Secretaries are âÂÂcertainly entitled to sign contracts connected with the administrative side of a companyâÂÂs affairs, such as employing staff and ordering cars, and so forth.â His judgment went as follows.
Salmon LJ said the secretary âÂÂis the chief administrative officer of the companyâ so he has ostensible authority with administrative matters. Nothing is more natural than âÂÂordering cars so that its servants may go and meet foreign customers at airports, nothing to my mind, is more natural than that the company should hire those cars through its secretary.â It might not be so with matters of commercial management of the company, for example, a contract for the sale or purchase of goods in which the company dealsâ but that was not the case here.
Megaw LJ concurred.