1 / 61

Contract Law

Contract Law. Organize the requirements of each element of a contract. Contract Law. All 6 Elements are required in order to have a contract Contract any agreement enforceable by law Ex Every time you buy something. 6 Elements. Offer

tschmidt
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 Organize the requirements of each element of a contract

  2. Contract Law • All 6 Elements are required in order to have a contract • Contract • any agreement enforceable by law • Ex Every time you buy something

  3. 6 Elements • Offer • Proposal by one party to another with intent to create a legal binding agreement • Acceptance • an unqualified willingness to go along with the offer

  4. 6 Elements continued • Genuine Agreement • if a valid offer is met by a valid acceptance then a genuine agreement exists • Can be destroyed by fraud, misrepresentation,duress, or undue influence • Capacity • Legal ability to enter into a contract • Ex Minor, mentally ill, drunk, drugs

  5. 6 Elements continued • Consideration • Must exchange something of value in order to create a bond • Legality • Must be permitted by law • Courts will not enforce an illegal contract

  6. Offer • Offer • Proposal • Offeror • Makes the offer • Offeree • Offer made to this person

  7. 3 Requirements of an Offer • Serious Intent • Must intend to make the offer • Advertisements? • No serious intent • Known as an invitation to negotiate • Definite and Certain • Must use definite words • Communicate to the Offeree • Phone, fax, Internet, letter, etc

  8. Organize the Required Parts and Forms of a Contract

  9. Breach of Contract • Wrongful failure to perform one or more promises of a contract.

  10. Writing must identify: • Place • Subject Matter • Terms • Signature of both parties • Date • Parties • Price • Intent of parties

  11. Contradictory/Ambiguous Terms • Contradictory • Handwritten terms prevails over typed terms • Handwritten numbers prevails over figures • Ambiguous Clauses • Can be interpreted two different ways • Court favors the one who didn’t draft the contract

  12. Statute of Frauds? Requires that certain contracts must be in writing • Relates to executory contracts

  13. Must be in Writing: • Contracts to pay debts of others • Contracts to pay debts of deceased persons • Contracts requiring more than a year to perform • Contracts to sell real property • (Exception: Equitable Estoppel – must rely on promise.) • Contracts for sale of goods over $500 • Prenuptial contract (contemplation of marriage)

  14. Parol Evidence Rule • Courts assure ALL terms are written into the agreement.

  15. Changing the Writing • Read entire document • If you don’t agree with something, then cross it out and both parties initial it • Write in promises • Refuse to sign if you don’t agree contract

  16. Acceptance Unqualified willingness to go along with the offer

  17. Requirements of Acceptance • Unconditional Acceptance • Mirror Image Rule • Acceptance must “mirror” offer • Any change means there is no acceptance • Counteroffer • Offeree makes an offer • Offeror becomes offeree

  18. Methods of Acceptance • Contract accepted when sent, if same method of communication used • Contract accepted when received, if different method of communication is used • If method is stated in offer, it MUST be used • Action=Acceptance • Silence cannot be a method of acceptance

  19. Example of Acceptance

  20. Example of Acceptance

  21. Termination of Offer • Revocation – Taking back of an offer by offeror • Rejection – Refusal by the offeree • Counteroffer – Any change in the terms of the offer • Expiration of Time – If the offer puts a time limit on the offer and it has passed • Death – Offeror dies • Insanity – Offeror is declared insane

  22. Genuine Agreement A valid offer has been made by the offeror, and a valid acceptance has been exercised by the offeree

  23. Mistake • Unilateral Mistake • An error on the part of one of the parties • Cannot get out of contract • Types: • Nature of the Agreement • Signing a contract you don’t understand or have not read • This applies to signing a contract in a language you don’t understand • Identity of a Party • Bound by contract with face to face meetings • May be able to void a contract made NOT face to face

  24. Bilateral Mistake (Mutual Mistake) • Both parties are mistaken • Types: • Possibility of Performance • Contract is impossible to perform Either party can void contract • Subject Matter • Either party can void contract

  25. Fraud • Deliberatedeception for an unfair or unlawful gain • Define each word in bold

  26. Deliberate: Done with or marked by full consciousness of the nature and effects; intentional • Deception: The fact or state of being deceived • Gain: To secure as profit or reward • In order to prove fraud, you must prove the above 3 definitions

  27. Proving Fraud: • False Representation of Fact • Must be a material (important) fact • Concealment (nondisclosure) may be considered false representation • Representation Known to be False • False Representation Intended to be Relied Upon • False Representation Actually Relied Upon • Resulting Loss

  28. Innocent Misrepresentation • Make an innocent statement of supposed fact that turns out to be false • Injured party has the right to rescind (take back) the offer No rights to damages

  29. Duress • Overcoming a person’s will by use of force or by threat of force or bodily harm • Economic Duress • Threats to a person’s business or income • Actual physical harm will void the contract • Threat of physical harm will make contract voidable • A threat of exercising one’s legal right is NOT duress Ex Threatening to sue someone and you have right to sue, is NOT duress

  30. Undue Influence • Unfair and improper persuasive pressure within a relationship of trust

  31. Match the column on left with who they have undue influence over in the right column? • Doctor • Lawyer • Parents • Teacher • Student • Children • Client • Patient Answers: 1-4, 2-3, 3-2, 4-1

  32. Capacity to Contract

  33. Capacity to Contract • Capacity – legal ability to enter a contract • Majority – age of legal adulthood • Minor – not yet reached legal age (minority) • NC Age of Majority = 18 years old • Voidable Contracts – minors may disaffirm or avoid their contracts if they so choose • Infancy = minority = minor = under 18 yrs old

  34. Capacity to Contract • Returning Merchandise – must be returned if disaffirming a contract • Tender – offer to return • Misrepresenting Age – fraud - if contract disaffirmed, you may be sued for fraud

  35. Capacity to Contract • Disaffirming the Whole Contract - can’t disaffirm parts of a contract -- must disaffirm all or none • Disaffirming Contracts made with Minors – both can disaffirm contact

  36. Ratification of Contracts with Minors • Ratify – approve contract - after reaching majority age, a minor can ratify a contract made while he or she was a minor - ratification ends all rights given to a minor • Contracts for Necessaries – necessities – food, clothing, shelter, and medical care - responsible for the fair value of item

  37. Ratification of Contracts with Minors • Special Statutory Rules – minors have capacity to buy car/life insurance - married = adult - limited capacity if you own a business - renting apartment is a necessity

  38. Other Contractual Capacity Rules • Mentally impaired persons – if declared insane: • Prior to guardian being appointed – Contract is voidable • After guardian appointed - all contracts are void • Intoxicated person – must not understand the purpose, nature, or effect of the transaction - fair value of necessities

  39. Other Capacity Limitations • Convicts have certain limitations • Aliens – people who live in U.S. but own allegiance to a different country • - limited capacity • ex: war

  40. Consideration

  41. Gratuitous Contracts • The law does not enforce any contracts that are gratuitous • Gratuitous contracts are free agreements

  42. Consideration • Exchange of benefits and detriments by the parties to an agreements • Benefits • Something that a party was not previously entitled to receive • Detriments • Any loss suffered

  43. Types of Detriments • Give up or promise to give up something you are entitled to receive • Doing or promising to do something you have a legal right to do • Forbearance • Not doing something you have a legal right to do

  44. Agreements without Consideration • Promise to make a gift • Gifts have no consideration • Cannot be enforced • Gift that has been given? • Doesn’t have to be returned • Donor – Gives the gift • Donee – Accepts the gift

  45. Agreements without Consideration • Promise to obey the law • No detriment • You are obligated to obey the law • Preexisting Duty • If a person is already under legal duty to do something, a promise to do that same thing does not furnish consideration

  46. Agreements without Consideration • Past Consideration • Consideration cannot already have been completed • Promise to attend a social agreement • No consideration • However, in some instances (prom) there may be grounds for a lawsuit You must show a loss • Exception: Prom

  47. Adequacy of Consideration • Courts don’t look at adequacy or value of an agreement unless it is unconscionable • Unconscionable? • So lopsided that the average person would not agree to terms

  48. Special Applications • Partial Payment of Debt • Must have new consideration in order to relieve entire debt • Settlement of Disputed Claims • Examples: Fixing your car or visit the doctor • Extension of Time • To extend time, one party must offer new consideration

  49. Promises Enforceable Without Consideration • Pledges and subscriptions • Promissory Estoppel • Rely on what a person said • Elements: • Promise must bring action or forbearance • One who gave no consideration must have relied on the promise • Injustice can be avoided only enforcing the promise

  50. Consideration Quiz • Draw a box – 2x2 • 1 A sells a car to B for $5000 • 2 B sells stereo to A for $150 • 3 A gives B an engagement ring • 4 A gives B $50 for returning her lost jacket B received the $50 the day after the jacket was returned • 5 A gives B $100 for saving his sons life (B is a police officer)

More Related