Offer Flashcards

1
Q

OFFER

A

An offer is a manifestation of an offeror’s willingness to enter into a legally binding agreement with the offeree. The offer manifests the offeror’s present contractual intent, creating a power of acceptance in the offeree.

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2
Q

By what standard are do courts measure an offeror’s present contractual intent?

A

Courts use an objective standard to determine whether an offeror intended a communication to be an offer. The offeror’s secret intentions are not relevant.

  • No Intent
    • Anger, Humor, Opinion, Speculation
  • Intent
    • Goof faith offer, bad faith offer, fingers crossed
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3
Q

Vague Offer

A

In order to be valid, an offer must

  1. be directed at a specific offeree or class of offeree’s and
  2. state definite and certain terms for the proposed agreement.
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4
Q

Offer Terms: CL

A

At common law, an offer must definitely and certainly identify the:

  1. parties involved,
  2. subject matter,
  3. quantity, and
  4. price.

If all these terms are not sufficiently definite and certain, there is no contract.

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5
Q

Offer Terms: UCC

A

Under the UCC, a valid offer must definitely and certainly identify the:

  • parties involved
  • subject matter, and
  • quantity.

If it appears that parties intended to create a contract, but terms other than these are missing, courts may supply “gap-filler” terms described by the UCC.

  • Price: reasonable
  • Time of Performance: reasonable
  • Time of payment: on delivery
  • Place of performance: Seller’s place of business
  • Shipping method: common carrier

However, where terms are vague but not missing, the courts may not use UCC gap-fillers. Instead, the court must attempt to determine what the parties intended the terms to be; generally through considering parole evidence.

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6
Q

Are requirement and output contracts invalid for vagueness with regard to quantity?

A

No, requirement and output contracts qualify as sufficiently definite and certain with regard to quantity.

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7
Q

Do advertisements and bid-requests count as offers?

A

No, generally.

In general, advertisements and bid requests are considered invitations to deal which constitute preliminary negotiations and do not generally represent an offeror’s present contractual intent.

However, an advertisement can operate as a valid offer in the case of reward advertisements and very specific andvertisements that definitely and certainly state the required essential elements of a contract.

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