Week 8 - Contract Law Flashcards
What is consideration?
To enforce a contract, you have to pay, or promise to pay, something. Can be:
- money
- provision of goods/services
- the undertaking of an onerous obligation
- refraining from doing something e.g. agreeing not to sue or
- a promise to do any of these things
Does the consideration have to go from promisee to promisor?
No. Like the consideration could be to donate to charity or something
Does consideration have to be a fair/adequate price?
No, it only has to be a price of some legal value.
Consideration must be sufficient and not be:
- A vague promise
- Past consideration or
- A promise to do something one is legally obligated to do (prior legal obligation)
What is a vague promise?
When the promisee promises to do something or refrain from doing something that really has no legal value or is super uncertain, e.g. promising to be nice or to ‘cease complaining’ (White v Bluett)
What is past consideration?
If the price was paid before the promise was made then it’s insufficient consideration (Roscorla v Thomas). e.g. at the end of the working day, Johnny promises to pay Cathy $50 bonus for her hard work.
What is prior legal obligation?
If the price paid by the promisee is the fulfilment of a prior legal obligation, this is insufficient evidence
Is part payment of a debt by the debtor sufficient consideration for a promise by the creditor to waive payment of the balance of the debt?
No. It’s only sufficient consideration if:
- the debtor makes the part payment earlier than the originally agreed due date
- The part payment is made by a third party rather than the debtor
- The debtor accompanies the part payment with additional consideration such as the provision of a service
What is a deed?
A formal, written contract signed by the parties before a witness and ‘sealed and delivered’. To enforce a deed, no need to show that the promisee provided consideration for the promise.
Contracts that aren’t deeds are simple contracts, and those needs consideration. Most contracts are simple contracts
What is lack of consent, and the 5 circumstances where it may occur?
When one of the parties have been bullied, pressured, manipulated into entering into the contract, thereby making it unenforceable.
Circumstances include:
- Mistake
- Duress
- Undue influence
- Unconscionability
- Misrepresentation
What are the three times of mistakes that can terminate contracts?
- Unilateral mistakes
- Common mistakes
- Mutual mistakes
What is a unilateral mistake?
Where one party makes a serious mistake about a fundamental aspect of the contract and the other party knows that they have made this mistake and seek to take advantage of that mistake.
In mistaken identity cases, the court will declare a contract void for unilateral mistake where (Cundy v Lindsay):
a) one party is mistaken as to the identity of the other party and
b) the identity of the party is a fundamental aspect of the contract and
c) the other party knows of the mistake and seeks to rely on it.
How will the court declare the contract void in a case of unilateral mistake?
A) one party is mistaken as to the identity of the other party and
B) the identity of the party is a fundamental aspect to the contract and
C) the other party knows of the mistake and seeks to rely on it
Can unilateral mistakes be made about the nature of a written document that was signed?
Yes. If:
A) the party made the mistake had a good reason not to read the contract (eg blindness, illiteracy)
B) the mistake is about the fundamental nature of the document they were signing
This is known as non est factum (not my document)
What is a common mistake?
When both parties make the same mistake. The contract will be made void if:
A) the agreement between the parties was conditional upon the truth of a belief held by both parties and
B) at the time the agreement was formed the belief was incorrect
But if the court was not conditional upon the truth of the bilateral belief, the contract will not be void. E.g selling a painting that you thought was a Monet