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CHAPTER 13. Capacity and Consent. Click your mouse anywhere on the screen when you are ready to advance the text within each slide. .
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CHAPTER 13 Capacity and Consent
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Quote of the Day “I am not young enough to know everything.” J.M. Barrie, British playwright
Capacity • Capacity is the legal ability to enter into a contract. • Minors (anyone under age 18) lack legal capacity. • A voidable contract may be canceled by the party to the contract who lacks capacity. • In some cases, lack of capacity creates a void contract.
Minors • Disaffirmance • A minor generally may disaffirm a contract; that is, he may notify the other party he refuses to be bound by the agreement. • The minor also has the option of filing a suit to rescind the contract, that is, to have a court formally cancel it. • Restitution • A minor who disaffirms a contract must return the consideration he has received, to the extent he is able.
Minors -- Exceptions • Timing • Minors may disaffirm a contract up to a reasonable time after turning 18, unless they ratify the contract after turning 18. • Necessaries • A necessary is something essential to the minor’s life and welfare. • On a contract for necessaries, a minor must pay for the value of the benefit received.
Minors -- Exceptions • Misrepresentation of Age • Some states will not allow a minor to disaffirm if he has lied about his age. • Other states allow the minor to receive only the value of the returned goods.
Mentally Impaired Persons • Definition • A person with mental illness or defect, who is unable to understand the nature and consequences of a transaction. • Generally creates only a voidable contract. • Intoxication • When an intoxicated person makes a contract, it is voidable. • Restitution • A mentally infirm party who seeks to void a contract must make restitution.
Misrepresentation and Fraud • Innocent misrepresentation • means the party believes the statement to be true and has a good reason for that belief. • Fraudulent misrepresentation • means the party knows that the statement is false.
Misrepresentation and Fraud • To rescind a contract based on misrepresentation or fraud, a party must prove three elements: • (1) there was a false statement of fact; • Puffery (exaggerated “sales talk”) is not a statement of fact. • (2) the statement was fraudulent or material; and • (3) the injured person justifiably relied on the statement.
Plaintiff’s Remedy for Misrepresentation or Fraud • If the maker’s statement is fraudulent, the injured party generally has a choice of rescinding the contract or suing for damages. • Sale of Goods • UCC §2-721 permits a party to rescind a contract and then sue for damages whether the misrepresentation was fraudulent or innocent.
Nondisclosure of a Fact (Silence) • Silence is misrepresentation only when disclosure is necessary: • To correct a previous assertion • To correct a basic mistaken assumption • A seller must report any known latent defect that the buyer is not expected to discover himself. • To correct a mistaken understanding about a writing • In a relationship of trust • When one party naturally expects openness and honesty, based on a close relationship, the other party must act accordingly.
Mistake -- Bilateral • A bilateral mistake occurs when both parties negotiate based on the same factual error. • If the parties contract based on an important factual error, the contract is voidable by the injured party. • Conscious Uncertainty • No rescission is allowed where one of the parties knows she is taking a risk.
Mistake -- Unilateral • Sometimes only one party enters a contract under a mistaken assumption, a situation called unilateral mistake. • to rescind for unilateral mistake, a party must demonstrate that she entered the contract of a basic factual error and that either • (1) enforcing the contract would be unconscionable or • (2) the nonmistaken party knew of the error.
Duress • If one party makes a threat that causes the victim to enter into a contract, with no reasonable alternative, the contract is voidable.
Economic Duress • In analyzing a claim of economic duress, courts look at these factors: • Acts that have no legitimate business purpose • Greatly unequal bargaining power • An unnaturally large gain for one party • Financial distress for one party
Undue Influence • To prove, one must demonstrate: • A relationship between the two parties either of trust or of domination, and • Improper persuasion of the stronger party
“Both parties must have the capacity to make a deal, and both must give genuine consent.”