1 / 25

CONTRACT LAW

CONTRACT LAW. At the end of this lecture you should have an understanding of: - how contract law developed in England - the essential ingredients of a contract - judicial approaches to finding the existence of a contract. Common law – birth of contract law.

Download Presentation

CONTRACT LAW

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CONTRACT LAW At the end of this lecture you should have an understanding of: - how contract law developed in England - the essential ingredients of a contract - judicial approaches to finding the existence of a contract

  2. Common law – birth of contract law • Contract law developed through the courts of common law – the ‘writ’ system • Pickering v Thoroughgood 1533 • General cause of action – assumpsit • Slade’s case 1602

  3. Developments from the 16th to 19th centuries • Consideration • Industrial revolution • Principle of ‘laissez-faire’ • Treatises on contract

  4. 20th century developments • Problems with principle of ‘laissez-faire’ • Judicial intervention in contracts • Statutory intervention in contracts

  5. Definition of a contract Is it possible? Tentatively: ‘a legally binding agreement or set of promises between two or more parties’

  6. Types of contract • Simple or informal contracts • Contracts made under seal/deed

  7. Simple contracts – how found? ‘An Englishman is liable, not because he has made a promise, but because he has made a bargain’ Chesire, Fifoot and Furmston’s Law of Contract (14th edition) page 32

  8. Job of the judge When a case is brought to court the task of the judge is to determine OBJECTIVELY from all the evidence what was: • Said • Written • Done

  9. External evidence ‘In contracts you do not look into the actual intent in a man’s mind. You look at what he said and did … a man cannot get out of contract by saying “I did not intend to contract” if by his words he has done so.’ Per Lord Denning in Storer v Manchester City Council 1974

  10. Balancing interests The judge has to balance the conflicting interests of ‘certainty’ and ‘fairness’ Contrasting cases: Centrovincial Estates plc v Merchant Investors Assurance Co Ltd 1983 Hartog v Colin and Shields 1939

  11. OFFER An offer is: ‘an expression of a willingness to be legally bound as soon as this expression, by words or conduct, has been accepted by the party or parties to whom it was addressed’ Offeror Offeree

  12. Hallmarks of a valid offer For there to be an offer: • negotiations must be finished • the offer must be specific enough • the offer must be known to the offeree

  13. Two contrasting cases Sudbrook Trading Estate Ltd v Eggleton 1983 Bushwall Properties Ltd v Vortex Properties Ltd 1976

  14. Cross offers An offer is effective only when it is communicated to the offeree Thus, cross offers do not make a contract Tinn v Hoffman and Co 1873

  15. Difficult cases ‘English law, having committed itself to a rather technical and schematic doctrine of contract, in application takes a practical approach, often at the cost of forcing the facts to fit uneasily into the marked slots of offer, acceptance and consideration.’ Per Lord Wilberforce in New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v Satterthwaite 1975

  16. Clarke v Dunraven 1897 Merchant Shipping Act 1862 New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v Satterthwaite 1975

  17. Finding a valid offer • Preliminary negotiations • Advertisements • Goods on display in shops/catalogues • Auctions • Tenders

  18. Preliminary negotiations Gibson v Manchester City Council 1979

  19. Contrasting case Storer v Manchester City Council 1974

  20. Use of the word ‘offer’ Bigg v Boyd Gibbons Ltd 1971

  21. Advertisements Generally regarded as Invitations to Treat Partridge v Crittenden 1968

  22. Unilateral contracts • Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co 1893 • Bowerman v ABTA 1996

  23. Goods on display in shops • Fisher v Bell 1961 • Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Boots Cash Chemists (Southern Ltd) 1953

  24. Auctions • Payne v Cave 1979 • Harris v Nickerson 1873 • Barry v Heathcote Ball and Co (Commercial auctions) 2001

  25. Tenders • Spencer v Harding 1870 • Blackpool & Flyde Aero Club Ltd v Blackpool Boro Council 1990 • Harvela Investments v Royal Trust of Canada Ltd 1985

More Related