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Third-Party Interests

FIVE. Third-Party Interests. Objectives. Chapter Objectives: Use vocabulary regarding third-party beneficiaries, assignments, and delegations properly Differentiate among the various types of third-party beneficiaries

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Third-Party Interests

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  1. FIVE Third-Party Interests

  2. Objectives Chapter Objectives: • Use vocabulary regarding third-party beneficiaries, assignments, and delegations properly • Differentiate among the various types of third-party beneficiaries • Discuss the legal remedies available to the parties to a third-party contract, assignment, or delegation • Determine whether the rights and/or obligations under the contract can be assigned and/or delegated

  3. Objectives • This chapter will explore WHO, outside of the contracting parties, may have an interest in the agreement, • HOW their interests are created and perfected, and • WHAT effect they have on the performance obligations in the agreement

  4. Definitions • Third-party beneficiary • A person, not a party to the contract, who stands to receive the benefit of performance of the contract

  5. Definitions • Privity • A relationship between the parties to the contract who have rights and obligations to each other through the terms of the agreement

  6. Definitions • Intent • Having the knowledge and desire that a specific consequence will result from an action

  7. Definitions • Promisor • The party who makes a promise to perform under the contract • Promisee • The party to whom the promise of performance is made

  8. Types of Third-Party Interests • Examples of third-party contracts are wills and insurance policies • Wills are contracts between the person writing the will and the state. The state, the promisor, agrees to dispose of the deceased person’s possessions, as the promisee, has directed and benefits from the certainty of having these assets divided among her loved ones—the third-party beneficiaries

  9. Types of Third-Party Interests • The same logic follows with respect to insurance policies as third-party contracts

  10. Types of Third-Party Interests In order to be considered valid third-party beneficiaries, the contract must have named them in the formative stage. The parties must, at the time of contract, intend to benefit the third party. This element is critical as it defines the third-party beneficiary contract

  11. Types of Third-Party Interests • Incidental beneficiaries • Persons who may derive some benefit from the performance of a contract but who were not intended to directlybenefit from the performance

  12. Right To Sue • The third party has legally enforceable rights under the contract and, although not a party to the transaction, can sue for its enforcement • Example: A beneficiary under a life insurance contract may sue to enforce the performance (payment) of the policy if the insurance company fails to pay a valid claim

  13. Right To Sue • In a third-party creditor beneficiary contract, the promisor agrees to pay a debt owed by the promisee

  14. Right To Sue • The more common type of beneficiary is the donee • A donee receives a giftas a result of the transaction. The promisor confers a benefit on the donee at the request of the promisee • Again, it is easy to refer to wills: the donees are the heirs of the estate; they receive their inheritance as a gift from the testator (promisee) through the state’s probate system (promisor)

  15. Right To Sue • At the time the beneficiary learns of the agreement, her rights in the contract become vested • If the third-party beneficiary knows of and consents to the contract, the parties cannot cancel or modify the agreement without the beneficiary’s consent

  16. Right To Sue • Who can sue whom? • Based on privity, both the promisee and promisor can sue each other • Both the beneficiary and the promisee can sue the promisor if the promisor fails to bestow the benefit

  17. Right To Sue • Who can sue whom? • However, the promisor cannot sue the third-party beneficiary as that party has no obligations with regard to the original obligations under the contract. The third-party beneficiary is merely the recipient of the performance with no other duty to discharge

  18. Right To Sue • Assertion of defenses • Either the original parties or a third-party beneficiary has the right to claim any legal defenses or excuses that they may have as against each other. They are not extinguished by a third party

  19. Assignment/Delegation Of Contractual Rights & Obligations • Either party, the offeror or offeree, may assign their rightsto receive performance and/or delegate their dutiesto perform under the original contract to a new third party

  20. Assignment/Delegation Of Contractual Rights & Obligations • Assignment • The transfer of the rights to receive the benefit of contractual performance under the contract • Delegation • The transfer of the duties/obligations to perform under the contract

  21. Assignment/Delegation Of Contractual Rights & Obligations • Assignor • The party who assigns his rights away and relinquishes his rights to collect the benefit of contractual performance • Assignee • The party to whom the right to receive contractual performance is transferred • Obligor • The original party to the contract who remains obligated to perform under the contract

  22. Assignment/Delegation Of Contractual Rights & Obligations • Delegant/Delegator • The party who transfers his obligation to perform his contractual obligations • Delegate/Delegatee • The party to whom the obligation to perform the contractual obligations is transferred

  23. Assignment/Delegation Of Contractual Rights & Obligations • If the contract is silent as to the ability of the parties to assign their rights, it is usually assumed that assignment is permissible if it is reasonable • The assignment does not substantially alter the rights and obligations of the original parties to the contract

  24. Summary • If the parties to a contract intendto have the performance, the benefit of the contract, conferred on a person not in privityto the contract, they have created a third-party beneficiary contract • The promisoris the person who will bestow the benefit upon the third party and the promisee is the person obligating himself to the promisor

  25. Summary • There are two categories of third-party beneficiaries: creditorsand donees • At the time the beneficiary learns of the agreement, his rights in the contract become vested • A third-party beneficiary can sue for enforcement of the contract and the defendant can assert any defensesthat he would have if sued by the party in privity

  26. Summary • After making the contract, the parties may assign their rights and/or delegate their dutiesunder the contract to a third party • The most important difference to remember between the two—assignment and delegation—is that an assignor usually is no longer liable under the contract, meaning that he is not party to a suit to enforce the assignment, whereas a delegant remains liable under the contract

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