Barry v Davies qualified
Payne by ruling that if the auction is advertised as being "without a reserve price", then the auctioneer is bound to sell to the highest
bona fide bidder (and not the seller himself, as attempted in
Warlow v Harrison). Also, the
Sale of Goods Act 1979, s 57 states that if an auction is held without any reserve, then the auctioneer must accept the highest bid (this was subsequently applied in Barry v Davies). In opening a contract class at
Harvard Law School in the autumn of 1870, Professor
Christopher Columbus Langdell, instead of the traditional didactic approach of lecturing a hall of students, pointed to a student and asked, “Mr. Fox, will you state the facts of
Payne v Cave?”, then, “Mr. Rawle will you give the plaintiff’s argument?” He replied to answers in the
Socratic method, with “could you suggest a reason?”. This became known as the case method of legal study, which is followed around most of the common law world today. ==See also==