1 / 12

Answering the “Offer and Acceptance” Objection

Answering the “Offer and Acceptance” Objection. Richard Warner. The Current Situation. Courts routinely enforce End User License Agreements between a software manufacturer (Microsoft, Adobe, ProCD) and a consumer (you, me, Zeidenberg).

avalon
Download Presentation

Answering the “Offer and Acceptance” Objection

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. Answering the “Offer and Acceptance” Objection Richard Warner

  2. The Current Situation • Courts routinely enforce End User License Agreements between a software manufacturer (Microsoft, Adobe, ProCD) and a consumer (you, me, Zeidenberg). • What is the answer to the “no offer and acceptance” argument? • To see the answer, first ask, • Why don’t we read standard form contracts?

  3. The Answer • Because we already know the terms are acceptable. • Seeing why this is true provides the answer to the “offer and acceptance” objection. • The place to begin is with the fact that contracting is a norm-governed activity.

  4. Norms Defined • A norm is • a sanction-supported behavioral regularity in a group of people, where • the regularity exists in part because each group member thinks each group member ought to act in accord with that regularity. • An example: • You enter a crowed elevator. Where should you stand?

  5. Contract Examples • “Do not deceive a party about a material element of the bargain.” • A norm governing negotiation. • “Impose liability on the best cost-avoider.” • A norm governing contractual terms. • The refrigerator example. • “Sellers may disclaim consequential damages.”

  6. Disclaiming Consequential Damages • This is a sanction-supported regularity • sellers regularly disclaim consequential damages, and • courts regularly enforce the disclaimers. • But do buyers think the ought to abide by it? • How could they? Most do not even know what it means.

  7. Legally-Implemented Norms • People think that they ought to abide by the law. • The disclaimer of consequential damages is a legally enforceable provision, • So buyers think that they ought to abide by it.

  8. Norm Consistent Terms = Acceptable Terms • Assume the terms in a standard form contract are consistent with a relevant norms. • The buyer accepts and abides by the norms. • Hence, the buyer thinks he or she ought to accept and abide by norm consistent terms. • To do otherwise is to do what the buyer thinks he or she ought not to do.

  9. Sellers Will Offer Norm-Consistent Terms • But why will sellers offer norm-consistent terms? • Because, in a sufficiently competitive market, that is the way they maximize profits. • The basic idea: • Buyers who detect a norm-violation will not, other things being equal, buy from sellers offering norm-inconsistent terms, and • Enough buyers will not buy that the lost profits are greater than any gain from norm-inconsistent terms.

  10. The Offer and Acceptance Objection • The pre-packaged, no-negotiation deal contains acceptable terms, but • Should we regard that deal as a contract? • Where is the offer?

  11. Offer Defined • An offer is a manifestation of a willingness to enter a bargain so made as to justify the offeree in thinking his or her assent will conclude the bargain. • Manifestation: • If the buyer knows the terms are acceptable, why not regard that as enough for a manifestation? • Similarly, why not regard the consumer as justified in thinking his or her buying the item concludes the bargain?

  12. Freedom • There is a problem: contractual obligations are freely undertaken obligations. • How is the compelled choice involved in the no-negotiation contract a free choice. • The Cayman Islands example

More Related