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Understand the essentials of contracts, offers, acceptance, and termination. Learn requirements, implied terms, and the mirror image rule.
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Fundamentals of Contracts Mr. Valanzano Business Law
Contracts • Contract – _____________________________________ • Requirements for a transaction to be recognized as a contract: • 1) _________________________________ • 2) ________________________________ • 3) _____________________ • 4) ____________________ • 5) ________________________ • 6) _______________________ • Some contracts are required to be in writing.
Requirements of an Offer • Offer – a proposal by an ___________ to do something, provided the _____________ does something in return • Offeror – ________________________________________ ________________________________________________ • Offeree – ________________________________________ • To create a valid offer: • The offeror must appear ___________________________ ___________________________________ • The terms must be ________________________________ • The offer must be _________________________________
The “Test of the Reasonable Person” • The law will only recognize that an offer exists when the offeror ____________________________________________. • If a reasonable person would ________________________as indicating you intend to contract, _____________________. • If a reasonable person would interpret your conduct as not serious or as a joke, ___________________________. • This gives jurors and judges an _______________ test rather than a subjective test based on what you say you were thinking.
Complete and Clear Offers • All offers must identify the __________, ____________, and ________________, either directly or indirectly. • The amount of information which is essential depends upon the complexity of the transaction. • Example: real estate sale • Identity of the specific lot • Price • Full terms for payment • Date for delivery of possession • Date for delivery of the deed • If any of the above terms were missing, there would not be a valid offer
Implied Terms and Advertisements • In some contracts, a term might not be implied by law or common practice. • Example: In a sale of good between merchants, when price is not specified, current market price is the basis for the contract. • Advertisements in newspapers, magazines, on radio or TV, or in the mail are generally not offers. Courts treat them as _______________ to customers to make offers. • Ads become offers when they are worded in ways that ________________________________________________ or if it asks the offeree to _______________________________.
Termination of Offers • Revocation by the Offeror – __________________________ ________________________________ • An offer can be terminated if the offeror has a ___________ ___________ the offer must be accepted by. • If there is nothing in the offer about a length of time to accept, a reasonable amount of time is determined depending on the type of offer. • The offeree _________________________. • The offeree can ___________________________. • Death or insanity of either the offeror or offeree
Acceptance • Acceptance – ____________________________________ ________________________________________ • If an offer is made to only one person, only that person can accept the offer. If an offer is made to a group of people, anyone in that group that knows of the offer can accept it. • To create an enforceable contract, the acceptance must: • _________________________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________
Acceptance Must Match Offer • Mirror Image Rule – ____________________________ _____________________________; if it varies any term, it is a ____________________ • The mirror image rule applies to contracts for services such as tax preparation and realty. • By statute (___________), the mirror image rule has been changed for the sale of goods
Types of Contracts • An _______________ contract is a contract that may be oral or written. • When a contract is formed through the actions of the parties, this is called a _______________ contract. • A ______________ contract contains two promises. • A ______________ contract contains a promise by only one person to do something, if and when the other party performs an act. • All contracts may be _________ or ____________. • _____________________: a law stating certain contracts must be in writing to be enforceable
Genuine Agreement (Assent) • Genuine Agreement – ___________________________ ______________________________________ • The absence of genuine agreement will make what appears to be a contract voidable (the injured party can rescind). • Rescission – ____________________________________ ________________________________________ • Ratification – __________________________________ ____________________________________
Duress • Duress – _______________________________________ _________________________________________ • A contract resulting from duress is voidable. • Types of threats used to force agreements resulting in duress: • __________________________ • __________________________ • _________________________ • _________________________
Undue Influence • Undue Influence – ______________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ • The two key elements of undue influence are the _________________ and the ______________________. • Unfair terms within a contract is usually a strong sign of unfair persuasion.
Mistakes • _______________________ – when one party holds an incorrect belief about the facts related to a contract (usually will not affect validity of a contract) • ___________________________ – both parties have an incorrect belief about an important fact (recognized or induced) • Material Facts – ________________________________ ______________________________________________ (subject matter or law)
Misrepresentation • Misrepresentation – ______________________________ __________________________ • ________________ – the offeror using details they thought were true but are actually not • __________________ – the offeror knowingly using untrue statements • Statements are considered misrepresentation if: • The statement is one of fact or there is active concealment (substitute for false statement of fact) • The statement is material to the transaction or fraudulent • The victim reasonably relied on the statement
Fraud • All elements of misrepresentation must be proven in order for fraud to be present. • The misrepresentation must be ____________________ or __________________________. • The misrepresentation or concealment ________________ _________________________________. • Remedies for fraud: • ______________________ • ______________________ • ______________________ (money awarded in order to punish the fraudulent party)
Consideration • Consideration – ________________________________ _______________________________________________ • To be consideration, a promise must _______________ _________________________________. • The 3 Requirements of Consideration: • Each party must give an act or promise to the other party • Each party must trade what they contribute to the transaction for the other party’s contribution • What each party trades must have legal value (be worth something in the eyes of the law)
Common Consideration Terms • Output Contract - _________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ • ____________________________ - when a seller agrees to supply all of the needs for a particular buyer • Liquidated Debt – _______________________________________________ _______________________________________ • ______________________________ – an agreement where both sides agree to compromise on the terms of a contract • Release – _______________________________________________________ • _________________________________ – when someone in debt pays their combined creditors less than the total of what is owed to all of them in exchange for agreeing not to file for bankruptcy
Capacity • Capacity – _____________________________________ _______________________________________________ __________________________________________________ • Minors, mentally handicapped, and the intoxicated lack contractual capacity. • Minors gain contractual capacity by being emancipated, getting married, moving out, joining the armed forces, giving birth, and/or getting employed full time • __________________________ – when people who work for an organization have the power to bind the organization to a contract
Disaffirming Contracts • Disaffirmance – ____________________________________ _______________________________ • Types of contracts that can be disaffirmed by those who lack capacity: • Contracts for non-necessities • Contracts to pay fair price for necessities • Types of contracts that can NOT be disaffirmed: • Court-approved contracts • Major commitments (enlist in army; student loan) • Banking Contracts • Insurance Contracts • Work-related contracts • Sale of realty • Apartment rental
Legality • Agreements can be void and unenforceable if they involve contracting for an illegal act. • Types of contracts that are voidable if illegal acts are involved: • Contracts made illegal by specific statute - Illegal gambling, Charging more than maximum interest rate (usury), Discrimination • Agreements that obstruct legal procedure – bribing jurors, paying for false testimony, refraining from informing on an alleged crime • Agreements made without a required license – agreements with doctors, lawyers, brokers, contractors, etc. • Agreements that affect marriage negatively – an illegal immigrant paying someone to marry them so they can gain citizenship • Agreements that restrain trade unreasonably – price fixing, bid rigging, resale price maintenance, allocation of markets, covenants not to compete
How Courts Help Parties to Illegal Contracts Under Common Law • Courts will not enforce the agreement. • Courts will leave the parties where they are. • Restitution – ____________________________________ • Under common law, restitution will not be paid in most instances. • Exceptions: • If the law that was violated was designed to protect an injured party • The victim is excusably ignorant (victim does not know contract is illegal, other party does, minor illegality) • A party rescinds before the illegal act occurs • Only legal parts of the contract will be enforced (divisible contract)
How Courts Help Parties to Illegal Contracts Under the UCC • Under the UCC governing the sale of goods, it makes agreements or contract clauses that are unconscionable unenforceable. • Unconscionability – ______________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ • Procedural – shown by _______________________________ • Substantive – established by ___________________________ • Most courts require both types on unconscionability to be present to determine a contract illegal. • When a court finds a contract illegal for unconscionability it can: • Refuse to enforce the contract • Enforce only the legal parts of the contract • Modify the terms of an agreement to make it fair
The Statute of Frauds • Requires certain contracts to be _______________ and _____________ in order to be enforceable in court. • When a contract has been fully performed it is considered ______________. If there are still parts to be done by either or both parties it is considered _________________. • Contracts that must be in writing: • Purchase or sale of goods valued at $500 or more • Buying and selling of real estate • Contracts that will take more than 1 year to complete • Promises to pay the debt or answer for a legal obligation of another person • Promises to give something of value in return for a promise of marriage
Content Requirements Under Common Law • Essential terms required to create a valid offer and acceptance: • Names of the parties • Description of the subject matter • Price • Quantity • Other essential terms (method of delivery, terms of payment, method of financing, date of transfer, etc.) • Signature • Evidence of a contract (the writing indicates the existence of a contract)
Content Requirements Under the UCC • Under the UCC, the writing must indicate only: • The quantity of goods • A contract has been created between the parties • Signature • A writing signed and sent by 1 party is treated as the writing of the other party if not objected to within 10 days of receiving • The signature may be written, stamped, engraved, or printed • A signature may be any mark that is intended as a signature or authentication of the writing • The purpose us to prevent frauds by requiring proof on the contract’s existence that is hard to fake
Exceptions to the Statute of Frauds • Exceptions with contracts to pay a debt or answer for the legal obligation of someone else: • when there is a primary promise • when the executor of a deceased person’s estate agrees to pay the unpaid debts personally instead of using the deceased’s assets • when a 3rd party promises to pay another’s debt (main purpose rule) • Under the UCC, a writing and signature is not required for sale of goods of $500 or more when goods: • are ordered to be specially manufactured • have been ordered, paid for, and payment was accepted • have been received and accepted by the buyer • Exceptions with contracts to buy or sell real estate: • when the seller delivers the deed • if the buyer made partial or full payment, has occupied the land, and made substantial improvements to the land
The Parol Evidence Rule • Integration Clause – _____________________________________ _______________________________________________________ • Parol Evidence Rule – keeps out ___________________________, _____________________, ______________, and other discussions that are not __________________________________ • Parol evidence or statements are usually not admissible in court except: • To clarify unclear terms in the writing • If the written contract was not intended to be a complete agreement • If a condition necessary to the contract never occurred • If fraud, forgery, illegality, mistake, or misrepresentation occurred • To show the parties reached an another agreement or terminated the contract • To show the contract is voidable because one party lacked capacity
How are conflicts in written terms interpreted? • When a contract refers to an amount of money in both words and numbers, the words will be relied on if they do not match. • __________________________ – when courts interpret contracts, they look at the main objectives to see which clauses should prevail over others • The plain and normal meaning of ordinary words will be used to determine the meaning of a contract. • ______________________ – contracts written by a stronger party (_________) with the help of lawyers who favor the interests of their clients; the weaker party (_______) must “take it or leave it” and the terms of the contract are non-negotitable • Examples: purchasing something on credit, life insurance
Transfer of Contractual Obligations • Contractual Rights – ____________________________ _______________________________ • Contractual rights can be transferred to others. The transfer of contractual rights is called an ________________. • The party who transfers the contractual right is the ______________and the party who receives it is called the __________________.
Assignable and Non-assignable Rights • A party may assign contractual rights as long as performance will not be materially changed. • Performance – ________________________________________________ • State statutes require that certain assignments be in writing, but no consideration is necessary to make a valid assignment. • Contractual rights may not be assigned if performance would be materially changed or if performance would become substantially more difficult. • Rights that may not be transferred include: • A right created under a contract that prohibits the transfer of contractual rights • Claims for damages for personal injuries • Claims against the United States • Rights to personal services, especially those of a skilled nature, or when personal trust and confidence are involved • Assignments of future wages, as limited by state statutes
Delegating Contractual Duties • Contractual Duties – __________________________________ • The transfer of duties is know as _______________________. • Obligor – ___________________________________________ • “__________________________________________________.” – this means that the assignee receives exactly the same contractual rights and duties as the assignor had. • If the obligor breaches, the assignee, not the assignor, must sue for the breach.
How are contracts discharged? • Discharge – _________________________________________ ____________________________ • Breach of Contract – __________________________________ _______________________ • When one party commits a major breach, the other party can consider their obligation discharged. When this happens in a sales contract under the UCC, it is called ________________. • ___________________________ – when most duties are performed, but only a minor duty remains (contract not discharged) • Defaults – _____________________________ • When a party notifies the other party that they will default before the time of performance, this is called an _____________________.
Other Ways a Contract is Discharged • By ______________________: • On a specified date of termination • Upon the occurrence or failure of a specified event to happen • At the free will of either party upon giving ample notice • If both parties agree to rescission, they will attempt to be put back into the position they were in prior to contracting. • Substitution – replacing an existing contract with a new one • An agreement to change the obligations of the original contract is called accord and the performance of the new obligation is called satisfaction. • Novation – a party releasing the other from their duty and accepting a substitute party • By _______________________________: • Destruction of the subject matter • Performance declared illegal • Death or disability
Discharging Contracts by Operation of Law • A contract can be discharged by operation of law in the following ways: • Promisor’s debts are ______________________________ • Time for performance elapsed due to ________________ ___________________ • __________________ – a material change in the terms of a written contract without consent of the other party (must be material, intentional, made by a party or authorized agent of a party to the contract, and without consent of the other party)
Tender of Performance • Tender – ___________________________________________ • If the duty requires the doing of an act, a tender made in good faith but is rejected will discharge the obligation of the one offering to perform. • If the obligation requires the payment of money, rejection of an offer to pay the money does not discharge the debt or prevent the creditor from collecting. • Legal Tender – ____________________
Breach of Contract and Remedies • The law divides breaches of contract into 2 categories: ________________________ and ________________. • Remedy – __________________________________________ ______________________________________________ • The significance of the breach in relation to the entire contract will determine if the breach is major or minor. • Basic remedies for a major breach: • _____________________________ • _____________________________ • _____________________________
Rescission and Restitution • How does a minor breach affect the victim’s duties? • The party injured by a minor breach usually must continue to perform their contractual duties. • Most likely, the victim will receive money damages to recover the cost of completing their duty. • Recovering damages to recover lost costs is called recovering through offset. • How does a major breach affect the victim’s duties? • The injured party does not need to continue performing their contractual duties. • The victim can also choose a remedy such as: restitution, money damages, and specific performance. • What are rescission and restitution? • Rescission – _________________________________________________ • Restitution – ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________
Types of Money Damages • _____________________ – seeks to place the injured party in the same financial position they would have been in if there had been no breach • Consequential – ____________________________________ __________________________________________________ • __________________ – used when the parties agree that a certain amount of money will be paid if a certain breach occurs • Punitive – ______________________________________________ _________________ (used in cases of fraud and intentional torts) • _______________ – a small damage awarded to punish the failure to perform a contractual duty even when there is not actual injury
Specific Performance • When money damages are not an adequate remedy for breach of contract a court may issue a _____________ ______________________. • Under this decree, the court orders the breaching party to __________________________________________________. • Specific performance is an ___________________________. • “___________________” – the injured party that is seeking damages is blameless for the breach and acted reasonably throughout the transaction
Denial of Remedies • An injured party must elect a remedy when suing. Specific performance and damages can’t be recovered for the same breach. • Specific performance is not available when damages are an adequate remedy. • Combining rescission and restitution and damages can only happen under a contract for the sale of goods governed by the UCC.
Other Ways to Eliminate Remedies • If the injured party does not act to minimize their injuries or ___________________________. • By intentionally and explicitly giving up a contractual right by using a ________________. • If a lawsuit to recover damages is not in place within the time stated by a state’s ______________________________. • If the debtor’s assets are cleared through _______________. This is where the debts are evenly shared by each creditor they are owed to.
Breach of Contract Rescission & Restitution Specific Performance Damages Waiver Injunction Compensatory Consequential Nominal Punitive Liquidated • Injunction - ___________________________________________ ______________________________________________________