Krell owned a suite of rooms in Pall Mall that commanded a view of the route of King Edward VII's coronation procession, scheduled for June 26, 1902, with related festivities on June 27. Henry, having inspected the rooms and their view, agreed to hire them for those two specific days for £75. The written agreement did not expressly mention the coronation or any viewing purpose and did not include sleeping accommodations; the timing and nature of the hire, however, were plainly connected to the procession. Henry paid a deposit (commonly reported as £25) and was to pay the balance before or at the time of use. Shortly before the event, the King fell ill and the procession was postponed. Henry refused to pay the remaining balance on the ground that the purpose of the hire—to view the coronation procession—had failed. Krell sued to recover the unpaid balance, arguing that Henry could still have used the rooms and that no express condition tied the contract to the procession.
Does the doctrine of frustration discharge a party's obligations when a supervening, unforeseen event (the postponement of the coronation procession) destroys the mutually understood foundation of the contract, even though literal performance (payment for and provision of rooms) remains physically possible and the contract contains no express condition?
A contract is discharged for frustration when, without the fault of either party and without allocation of the relevant risk, a supervening event occurs that was not reasonably contemplated by the parties at the time of contracting and that so significantly changes the nature of the outstanding contractual rights and/or destroys the common purpose or "foundation" of the contract that further performance would be radically different from that undertaken. Courts may consider the surrounding circumstances to determine whether an implied condition existed that a particular state of affairs or event would occur, forming the basis of the bargain.
Yes. The contract was frustrated because the coronation procession was the foundation of the agreement; its postponement destroyed the purpose for which the rooms were hired. Accordingly, Krell could not recover the unpaid balance.
The Court of Appeal (Vaughan Williams, Romer, and Stirling LJJ) reasoned that although the written agreement did not explicitly condition the hire on the coronation, the surrounding circumstances established that the rooms were hired for the specific purpose of viewing the procession on June 26–27, 1902. The dates corresponded precisely to the scheduled events; the rooms were not taken as ordinary sleeping apartments; and the value of the premises for those days derived almost entirely from their vantage point. The procession's postponement, through no fault of either party, meant that the fundamental state of things contemplated by both parties—the occurrence of the coronation procession on those dates—did not materialize. The court analogized to Taylor v. Caldwell, where destruction of a music hall discharged performance because the continued existence of the hall was an implied condition. Here, while physical performance (providing a room; paying money) remained possible, the essence of the bargain—the viewing opportunity—had vanished, rendering performance of a radically different character than contemplated. The absence of an express condition was not dispositive; the law implies a condition that the event forming the common foundation will occur when that understanding is objectively evident. Because the risk of postponement had not been allocated by the contract and the failure of the event was not attributable to either party, the contract was discharged and Krell could not recover the remaining price.
Krell v. Henry crystallizes frustration of purpose as distinct from literal impossibility. It authorizes courts to look at objective context to discern the contract's foundation and to discharge obligations when an unforeseen event destroys that foundation. The case is routinely contrasted with Herne Bay Steam Boat Co. v. Hutton, where the purpose was not entirely defeated, demonstrating the doctrinal line between total and partial frustration. Krell also foreshadows later developments in restitution: while Krell resolved liability for future performance, questions about recovery of pre-payments were later addressed in Chandler v. Webster (initially denying recovery) and ultimately in Fibrosa Spolka v. Fairbairn (permitting restitution for total failure of consideration). For law students, Krell teaches careful issue-spotting about purpose, risk allocation, foreseeability, and remedial consequences when contracts unravel due to unforeseen events.
Krell v. Henry stands as the definitive statement that contracts rest on more than paper: they also rest on shared assumptions. When an unforeseen event annihilates those assumptions and neither party bears the allocated risk, the law will discharge performance because the bargain has been fundamentally transformed. For students and lawyers, the case underscores the centrality of careful drafting (conditions, force majeure, and risk allocation), the importance of distinguishing impossibility from frustration, and the need to analyze whether the purpose has been totally or only partially defeated—often the decisive factor in whether obligations persist.