Post on 12-Nov-2014
Introduction to ContractsThe Agreement: Offer
The Agreement: AcceptanceConsideration
Reality of Consent
© 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Capacity to ContractIllegality
WritingRights of Third Parties
Performance and Remedies
© 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Contracts are agreements made up of big words and little type.
Sam Ewing, quoted in Saturday
Evening Post, May 1993
Introduction to Contracts
© 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Learning Objectives
Nature of contractsBasic elements of a contractBasic contract typesNon-contract obligations
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Not every promise is legally enforceable But when a set of promises has the
status of contract, a person injured by a breach of that contract is entitled to call on the government (courts) to force the breaching party to honor the contract
Contract law is ancient law, but has evolved to reflect social change
Contracts
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(1) agreement (2) between competent parties (3) based on genuine assent of the parties that is (4) supported by consideration, (5) made for a lawful purpose, and (6) in the form required by law, if any
See Figure 1, page 292
Elements of a Contract
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Bilateral contracts: two parties make promises to one another
Unilateral contracts: one party makes a promise Frequent buyer cards are offers for
unilateral contracts; gaining points on the cards accept the offer and create a contract
Contract Concepts and Types
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Valid contract: binding and enforceable agreement
Voidable contract: agreement otherwise binding, but due to circumstances surrounding execution or lack of capacity, may be rejected at option of one party
Void contract: agreement without legal effect because prohibited by law
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Contract Concepts and Types
Express contract: agreement of parties manifested by words, written or oral
Implied contract: agreement not shown by words, but by acts and conduct of parties
Difference between express & implied contracts relates to manner of proving the existence of the contract, not the effect; one or the other arises
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Contract Concepts and Types
Two bodies of law govern contracts: Article 2 of Uniform Commercial
Code Common law of contracts
Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) is statutory law in every state, but the common law of contracts is evolving
UCC contains nine articles
Sources of Governing Law
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Article 2 expressly applies to contracts for the sale of goods [2–102] (numbers in brackets refer to specific Code sections) UCC [1–105]: goods are tangible,
movable, personal property Does not apply to sale of services,
intangible property (stocks, intellectual property), or real estate
UCC Article 2
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Many contracts involve goods and services
Test that courts most frequently apply to decide whether Article 2 applies is to ask which element – goods or services – predominates in the contract See Pass v. Shelby Aviation
The UCC and Hybrid Contracts
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United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) is body of contract rules that harmonizes contract principles from many legal systems Seventy-one nations, including the United
States and Canada, are parties to the CISG See
UN Commission on International Trade Law website
International Contract Law
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CISG automatically applies to a contract for the sale of goods between commercial parties from nations that agreed to the CISG unless the parties expressly opt out of the CISG in their contract
International Contract Law
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Sometimes the law enforces an obligation to pay for certain losses or benefits even in the absence of mutual agreement and exchange of value; the court then applies: Quasi-contract theory Promissory estoppel
Non-Contract Obligations
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Quasi-Contract Theory
Quasi-contract is an obligation imposed by law to prevent unjust enrichment of one party in certain circumstances E.g., work performed by painter thinking
work justified by contract & other party, who receives benefit of work, denies work was justified
E.g., minor buys something but wrecks it, agreement is void by law, but the minor must pay the damages
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Quasi-Contract Remedies
Plaintiff recovers either the reasonable value of the benefit conferred on the defendant (reasonable price) or value of labor (quantum meruit)
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Promissory Estoppel
A court may apply doctrine of promissory estoppel when one party relies upon another party’s promise to his or her detriment (detrimental reliance), but there’s no contract Court will force promisor to fulfill
promise or pay compensation Example: Holt v. Home Depot, U.S.A., Inc.
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