Contracts Flashcards
requirements to satisfy statute of frauds
The contract must:
(1) be in writing
(2) be signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought
(3) contain all essential terms
Note: UCC > $500 must have a memo of sale that indicates contract’s been made; parties; quantity; signed by party to be charged
pre-existing duty rule (and exception at common law)
contracts for services (governed by common law) are subject to the pre-existing duty rule, which states that modifications without new consideration are unenforceable.
However, modifications without new consideration may be enforceable, even at common law, if the modification:
(i) rests on assumptions not anticipated by the parties when contract was made, and
(ii) is fair and equitable in light of circumstances
essential contract terms
common law = parties, subject matter, price, quantity
UCC = parties, subject matter, quantity
ways to satisfy statute of frauds other than a signed writing
— full performance
— part performance in real property (2 of 3 of payment / possession / improvements)
— UCC specially manufactured goods
— merchant’s confirmatory memo
confirming memo
— both parties are merchants
— one party sends memo to other party, who should know about its contents
— signed by sender (signature or letterhead)
…if receiving party does not respond within 10 days, contract will be enforceable against receiving party even if he didn’t respond
[NOTE: merchant is construed broadly; “any businessperson”]