Contracts Flashcards
Implied-in-Fact Contract
Formed by manifestations of assent other than oral or written language (i.e. by conduct).
Contract Formation
In order to accept an offer, you have to know of the offer to begin with.
Battle of the Forms
- Both parties must be merchants
- If the offeree accepts the offer and makes a material alteration to that offer, there’s a contract on the terms and material alteration is not part of it
- If the offeree accepts and makes a nonmaterial change to contract, then the nonmaterial alteration will be included in the contract unless the offeror timely objects
- Material alteration is any change to an offer that effects money, liability, or remedies for a breach of contract (i.e. arbitration)
- If the offeree makes acceptance conditional upon asset to an additional term, then this is a rejection and counteroffer
Offer Termination
- Offeror revokes prior to acceptance
- Offeree rejects offer
- Offeree makes a counteroffer
- Lapse of time (stock options; service contracts)
Mailbox Rule
• Only applies to acceptance
• Acceptance is effective upon dispatch, not receipt
• If you write down the address incorrectly, rule doesn’t apply and acceptance is not effective upon dispatch, only receipt
• DOES NOT APPLY TO OPTIONS
○ Acceptance has to be in seller’s hand before option expires
• Does NOT APPLY when offeree sends a rejection followed by an acceptance
○ Here, whichever is received first controls
○ DOES apply to the reverse - when you send an acceptance and then a rejection
Options
- Promise to keep an offer open for a period of time
- Common Law: must be supported by consideration
- UCC - Merchant’s Firm Offer Rule: no consideration needed if offer made by merchant offeror in writing who promises to irrevocably keep offer open for term (no more than 3 months/90 days)
Gap Fillers - UCC
• Court can fill in missing terms
• Court cannot fill in quantity!
○ Exception: Requirements contract - no quantity term needed; measured by buyer’s good faith need
Consideration
- Past consideration is not consideration
- Moral obligation is not consideration
- Adequacy of consideration will not be contemplated by court - consideration has to exist, but they don’t look at adequacy
Promissory Estoppel
- Substitute for consideration
* Reasonable reliance on a promise
Mutual Mistake
Both parties are mutually mistaken about contract terms
○ If mistake goes to essence of contract, grounds for rescission
Unilateral Mistake
Only one party mistaken about terms of contract
○ Will not prevent contract formation
○ Exception: if the non-mistaken party knows or has reason to know of other party’s mistake, will not be able to keep benefit of bargain
Modification - Common Law
In order to have a valid modification to an already existing contract, need new consideration - preexisting duty rule
Modification - UCC
○ Allow for good faith modification with no consideration
○ Does not have to be in writing if both parties agree
Statute of Frauds Categories
• Marriage contracts
• Years, term of (excess of 1 year)
• Land sale
• Executory contracts
• Goods, sale of over $500
○ Merchant’s 10 day exception - if both parties are merchants and one merchant w/in reasonable amnt of time after entering into oral agreement w/ other merchant sends a written confirmation of the oral agreement, binds the sending party immediately. If recipient merchant does not reject to terms of written confirmation w/in 10 days of receipt, binds recipient as well
• Surety contracts - promises to answer for debt of another; guarantees
Perfect Tender Rule - UCC
• A seller must deliver perfect tender to a buyer
• Delivery of non-conforming goods is both acceptance and breach of contract by seller
• Buyer’s Options:
○ Buyer can accept goods and pay contract price
○ Buyer can timely reject goods and sue for damages
○ Buyer can accept in part and reject in part
• If the delivery of non-conforming goods is accompanied by notice of accommodation then it is not a breach, it is a counteroffer