Changes to the Fair Trading Act 1986 (FTA) are now in force which mean that all standard form business to business contracts with an annual threshold value under $250,000 (including GST) will be subject to the same unfair contract terms rules that already apply to business to consumer contracts. This article provides a brief summary of the application of the unfair contract terms rules to B2B contracts. For more detail please see our top 10 things to think about article.
WHAT CONTRACTS ARE AFFECTED?
Standard form contracts where the value is expected to be $250,000 (including GST) or less in any 12-month period are defined as small trade contracts under the changes to the FTA. The new rules apply to all new small trade contracts entered into on or after 16 August 2022 as well as any existing small trade contracts renewed or varied on or after that date.
WHAT TERMS ARE UNFAIR?
Terms considered unfair are those that:
- cause a significant imbalance in the parties rights and obligations under the contract;
- are not reasonably necessary to protect the legitimate interests of the advantaged party; and
- the terms would cause detriment to a party if they were applied, relied on, or enforced.
Potentially unfair terms are those that:
- allow one party to unilaterally vary the contract;
- place risk on a party for events outside their control;
- penalise one party (but not the other) for a breach of the contract;
- allow termination for non-material breaches;
- limit a party’s ability to terminate the contract; and
- allow one party to vary the upfront price payable under the contract without giving the other party a termination right.
WHAT SHOULD I DO?
Businesses should check if any of their standard form contracts are small trade contracts under the FTA and if they are, they should review them for unfair contract terms. Any unfair contract terms should be amended so that they are no longer unfair or removed from the contract.