Formation of a Contract Flashcards
What are the 3 elements of a properly formed contract?
Agreement (offer + acceptance)
Consideration
Intention to create legal relations
What is the difference between a bilateral contract and a unilateral contract?
A bilateral contract is an exchange of promises (both parties agree to do something for the other)
A unilateral contract is where offer is accepted by the performance of a prescribed act
What are the 6 questions to ask when establishing agreement?
(1) Is the advert / letter / statement an offer or an invitation to treat? If an offer, is it a valid offer?
(2) Is acceptance in response to the offer?
(3) Is acceptance unqualified?
(4) Is acceptance made through a valid mode?
(5) Is acceptance communicated?
(6) At the point of acceptance, is the offer still open or has it been revoked?
What is an offer?
An expression of willingness to contract on specified terms made with the intention that it is to become legally binding as soon as it is accepted by the person to whom it is addressed
What is an invitation to treat?
The first step in contractual negotiations
(ie. Not intended that it will be legally binding the moment it is accepted - unlike an offer)
Is an advert an offer or an ITT?
General rule: ITT
Exception: if seller is manufacturer
Exception: if advert can be construed as a unilateral offer
(eg. first person arriving at 9am with £1 = completion of prescribed action)
Is the display of goods an offer or an ITT?
ITT
(Both shop window & goods on shelf)
Is a tender an offer or an ITT?
General rule: ITT
Exception: If make a commitment
(eg. to accept the highest/lowest, to consider tenders etc.) - then will be a unilateral contract
(Nb. the bidder’s tenders are offers)
Is an auction an offer or an ITT?
Auctioneer makes an invitation to treat by opening bids
Bid is an offer
Acceptance occurs at the fall of the hammer
(Nb. An auction without reserve (ie. no min price) is a unilateral contract - auctioneer making unilateral offer to sell to highest bidder)
Is it a valid offer?
- Terms of offer must be clear and certain
- Offeror must show requisite intention to be legally bound
(judged objectively)
‘We may be prepared to sell’ v ‘We will sell’
Which of these statements by the offeror shows the requisite intention to be legally bound?
We ‘WILL’ sell
(Gibson & Storer cases of MCC inviting tenants to buy council homes - ‘may’ held no intention to be bound)
Can you snap up an offer?
No
Hartog v Colin: Col sold hairskins for 30s - at end of negotiation, accidentally said ‘per pound’ instead of ‘per piece’
–> No contract: parties not in true agreement because Hartog (offeree) knew Col’s mistake & could not have reasonably supposed that the stated price was correct
(2) Is acceptance in response to the offer?
Mostly clear on facts if offeree is accepting offeror’s offer
Only OFFEREE can accept
Who can accept an offer?
The offeree only (ie. the person to whom the offer was made)
Nb. If they have knowledge of the offer at the time of making acceptance, the** offeree’s motive for accepting is irrelevant**
(3) Is acceptance unqualified?
Acceptance** must be a mirror-image, ie. without qualification**
(eg. offering a different price instead is a counter-offer)
What is the effect of a counter-offer instead of acceptance?
It extinguishes the original offer
Does a request for further information terminate the offer?
No - offer remains open
(4) Is acceptance made through a valid mode?
Has offeror specified the mode of acceptance by using mandatory words (‘must respond by email’) AND explicitly excluded all other modes (‘only email’)?
If yes - ONLY acceptance in the prescribed mode will bind the offeror
If no** - acceptance that is ‘no less advantageous’ will bind the offeror**
(ie. consider purpose for which mode prescribed - default is timing: is alternative mode just as quick?)
How do you establish if acceptance is ‘no less advantageous’ & therefore binding on the offeror?
Consider the** purpose for which offeror has attempted (ie. mandatory words but may not excluded all other modes) to prescribe a mode**
If is the offerors responsibility to make the reason clear (eg. for record keeping, want email)
If they haven’t, the default position is TIMING - whether the alternative mode is just as quick
(5) Has acceptance been communicated?
Acceptance must be communicated - silence cannot constitute acceptance
EXCEPTION: Unilateral offers - just need to do prescribed act
Who can communicate acceptance?
The offeree
or
A third party authorised by the offeree