Wk 8 - Simple Apparent Contracts Flashcards
What is a contract?
Business is about making deals: . Buyers and sellers (contract for sale) . Wholesalers and retailers (contract for goods) . Banks and borrowers (loan) . Landlord and tenants (lease) A legally enforceable agreement
Three essential elements of a contract
Agreement (an offer & acceptance) + intention (to create legal relations) + consideration (the price)
If a contract is lacking, makes a contract invalid:
Capacity of the parties to enter a contract
Consent that is genuine
Legality of objects
Agreement
A meeting of minds and exists when two or more people share understanding and intention
Usually means there has been a valid offer made and that this offer has been accepted
Once an agreement is reached, the contract comes into existence and the parties become legally obliged to proceed with the contract
At point of acceptance, negotiations and expressions of interest turn into legally binding promises
Agreement: offer
Person making the offer is the offerer and the person(s) receiving the offer is called the offeree An offer can be: . Written . Verbal . Implied by conduct
What is an offer?
Must be distinguished from an invitation to treat:
An offer to consider offers and cannot create an agreement if there is a purported acceptance
E.g. advertisements, catalogues, price lists, goods in shop windows and shelves
What isn’t an offer?
Responding to a request for information is not the same as making an offer
An invitation to treat is not an offer
Terminating the offer
Acceptance, rejection, revocation,,,,,, lapse, death, condition failure
An offeree can reject the offer:
. Counter offer is considered a rejection of the original offer
. So if the offer is rejected or a counter offer is made the offeree cannot later change her mind and accept the og offer
. If the offer is not accepted or rejected, the offeror can revoke the offer but only if it has not yet been accepted
. Offeror can revoke offer even if they have promised to keep offer open for particular period
. If offer is not accepted, rejected or revoked it will lapse and the offer ends
Agreement: acceptance
Must be:
Unqualified
Communicated
Made in reliance on the offer
Once offeree accepts the offer an agreement has been reached
. Offeree cannot change mind after accepting, unless the offeror agree to release them from the contract
Acceptance must be unqualified
Offeree must accept offer without modifying it
If an acceptance is qualified, it is likely a modification of the og 9ffer and so constitutes a counter offer meaning:
. Og offer is rejected
. Offeree is instead making a new offer to og offeror
. Offeree cannot later change their mind to accept the og offer
Agreement: acceptance must be communicated
Acceptance not complete until offeree communicates their acceptance to offeror
If offeror has specified the specific mode of acceptance, then acceptance is not valid unless it is communicated that way
Agreement: acceptance must be in reliance on the offer
. Only offeree can accept the offer
. Acceptance must be in reliance on the offer - Acceptance must be in relation to the offer and intended response to the offer
. So a person cannot accept something that weren’t offered and they can’t accept something they don’t know about - there is no meeting of minds
Intention
Not every agreement is a contract
The intention of the two parties distinguishes legally binding contracts from other types of arrangements
Court looks at the conduct of the parties from the perspective of an objective observer and asks whether the parties were behaving in a way that indicated that they intended the agreement to be legally enforceable
Intention: traditional presumptions
Courts have traditionally made two important presumptions
. Where agreement is made in a social/domestic context, it is presumed that the agreement was not intended to be legally enforceable
. Where the agrerment is made in a commercial/business context, it is presumed that the agreement was intended to be legally enforceable
However these are only presumptions - they can be rebutted - it is very hard to rebut the presumption in a commercial/business setting