CHAPTER 12 Consideration

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Advertisements

Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
CHAPTER 15: BARGAINED-FOR CONSIDERATION. Learning Objectives: Nature of the Consideration Requirement Bargain Theory of Consideration Mutuality of Obligation.
Chapter 11 CONSIDERATION.
Consideration Chapter 8.
Business Law: Ch 8 Consideration.
Section 8.1.
1 Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Chapter 11 Contracts — Consideration. Introduction Consideration is legal value given in return for a promise or performance. Must have something of legal.
1. 2 CONSIDERATION Consideration is a required element of every contract.
LAW for Business and Personal Use © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible.
Mutual Consideration ● 9-1 What is Consideration? ● 9-2 Legal Value and Bargained-For Exchange ● 9-3 When is Consideration Not Required?
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Agreement and Consideration in Contracts Chapter 7.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
B USINESS L AW II Methods: Termination of an Offer.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 11 Consideration and Equity Chapter 11 Consideration and Equity.
P A R T P A R T Contracts Introduction to Contracts The Agreement: Offer The Agreement: Acceptance Consideration Reality of Consent 3 McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Business Law I Introduction to Contracts.
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Business Law and the Regulation of Business Chapter 12: Consideration
CHAPTER 8: CONSIDERATION By: Mike Francini, Tasia Gorski, Caitlin McNamara, & Sam Zangara Chapter 8: Consideration.
CHAPTER 8 Consideration
Consideration is legal value bargained for and given in exchange for an act or a promise Elements of Consideration Purely gratuitous promises are.
CHAPTER 11 CONSIDERATION: THE BASIS OF THE BARGAIN DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment (8 th Ed.)
Business Law - Week 3 Class Agenda Other information: Good Samaritan Law | International Law Review Week 2 Case Study Break Discussion: Contracts continued.
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Chapter 9 Mutual Consideration. Consideration Main purpose of consideration is to distinguish between social promises and more serious transactions where.
Consideration 2.01 Understanding elements and characteristics of a contract.
Nature and Terminology and Agreement in Traditional and E- Contracts Chapter 11 & 12.
Ch. 8 Consideration.  Consideration- What a person demands and generally must receive in order to make his or her promise legally binding.
Consideration Chapter 8. Consideration – what a person demands and generally must receive in order to make a contract legally binding.
Law for Business and Personal Use © Thomson South-Western CHAPTER 8 Consideration 8-1Types of Consideration 8-2Questionable Consideration 8-3When Consideration.
COPYRIGHT © 2011 South-Western/Cengage Learning. 1 Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears,
Chapter 8 Consideration. Gratuitous: Free Agreements Consideration : The exchange of benefits and detriments by the parties to an agreement. Benefit:
12-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
1 Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
A Bargain and an Exchange Consideration means that there must be bargaining that leads to an exchange between the parties. Consideration can be anything.
1 Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Copyright © 2010 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. and the Legal Environment, 10 th edition by Richard.
LAW FOR BUSINESS AND PERSONAL USE © SOUTH-WESTERN PUBLISHING Chapter 9Slide 1 When Is Consideration Not Required? Identify when promissory estoppel applies.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen when you are ready to advance the text within each slide. After the starburst appears behind the blue triangles,
LAW FOR BUSINESS AND PERSONAL USE © SOUTH-WESTERN PUBLISHING Chapter 9Slide 1 Legal Value and Bargained-For Exchange Identify when there is legal value.
Consideration Chapter Types of Consideration Identify the 3 requirements of consideration Discuss the adequacy of consideration.
Mutual Consideration. What is Consideration?  Main purpose to distinguish between social promises and more serious transaction where one thing is exchanged.
Mutual Consideration Mrs. A Business Law 9-1What Is Consideration? 9-2Legal Value and Bargained-For Exchange 9-3When Is Consideration Not Required? 1 CHAPTER.
CHAPTER 11 Agreement Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle.
CHAPTER 33 Life and Death of a Partnership
David P. Twomey - Boston College
CHAPTER 10 Introduction to Contracts
Chapter 12: Consideration
Chapter 11 Contracts: Consideration
CHAPTER 23 Creating a Negotiable Instrument
Chapter 11 Consideration
Chapter 13: Contracts – Consideration
Chapter 12 Contracts: Consideration
CHAPTER 21 Warranties and Product Liability
CHAPTER 14 Capacity and Consent
Chapter 12 Contracts: Consideration
Chapter 8 Consideration
Section 5.2 Consideration.
Chapter 11 Consideration and Promissory Estoppel
Chapter 11 Consideration and Promissory Estoppel
Chapter 12 Consideration
Chapter 11 Consideration
CHAPTER 9 Test review.
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 12 Consideration Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide or previous slide.

“Promises are the uniquely human way of ordering the future.” Quote of the Day “Promises are the uniquely human way of ordering the future.” Hannah Arendt, German-American Political Scientist

A Bargain and an Exchange Consideration means that there must be bargaining that leads to an exchange between the parties. Consideration can be anything that someone might want to bargain for. A promisor is the person who makes the promise, and promisee, the person to whom the promise is made.

A Bargain and an Exchange “Bargaining is obligating yourself in order to induce the other side to agree.” The thing bargained for can be: another promise or action. a benefit to the promisor or a detriment to the promisee. a promise to do something or a promise to refrain from doing something.

A B AND AND AND AND Consideration supports a contract! Bargain OR OR There is consideration to support a contract between A and B, when they bargain... Which causes... A to give B a benefit B to give A a benefit and their bargaining causes BOTH parties ... OR OR AND AND AND AND A to suffer a detriment B to suffer a detriment …to either give a benefit to the other or to suffer a detriment themselves. Consideration supports a contract!

Adequacy of Consideration Courts seldom inquire into the adequacy of consideration. A previously paid benefit is generally not consideration because it was not meant to induce the other side to agree. Exception: Economic Benefit -- in some cases, courts will enforce consideration that is an economic benefit, given with the expectation of later payment.

Mutuality of Obligations Illusory Promise If one party’s promise is conditional, the other party is not bound to the agreement. Sales Law: Requirements and Output Contracts See Ch. 11 for definitions of these contracts. Section 2-306 of the UCC expressly allows output and requirements contracts in the sale of goods.

Promissory Estoppel Under the doctrine of promissory estoppel, even if there is no contract a promise may be enforceable if: The offeror makes a promise knowing the offeree is likely to reply, The offeree does in fact reply; and The only way to avoid injustice is to enforce the promise.

Preexisting Duty A promise to which the promisor is already obligated is not consideration. Exceptions: If the scope of the promisor’s task increases, that increase is consideration. When unforeseen circumstances cause a party to make a promise regarding an unfinished project, that promise is valid consideration. Modification of a sale of goods is allowable without consideration, unless there is a written agreement forbidding such modifications.

Settlement of Debts -- Liquidated Debt A liquidated debt is one in which there is no dispute about the amount owed. In cases of liquidated debt, if the creditor agrees to take less than the full amount as full payment, her agreement is not binding. If the debtor offers a different performance to settle the debt and the creditor agrees, the agreement is binding.

Settlement of Debts -- Unliquidated Debt A debt is unliquidated if: (1) the parties dispute whether any money is owed, or (2) the parties agree that some money is owed but dispute how much. The parties may agree to settle for less than what is owed; this “accord and satisfaction” will be enforced if the debtor pays the agreed amount.

Payment by Check Common Law ruling: UCC §3-311 If a debtor writes “Full Settlement” on a check, and the creditor cashes it, the payment is in full whether or not it was the right amount. UCC §3-311 Affirms the Common Law ruling, but adds two exceptions: Organizations may notify debtors that any offers to settle debt for less than the whole amount must be directed to a certain person. The creditor can refund the paid amount within 90 days and then demand the full amount.

“The law does not hold us accountable for every promise we make “The law does not hold us accountable for every promise we make. The doctrine of consideration determines which promises a court must enforce.”

Link to the Internet Click above to return to the slide show. Clicking on the orange button below will link you to the website for this book. (You must first have an active link to the internet on this computer.) Once there, click: Online Study Guide, then Your choice of a chapter, then Practice, then Internet Applications You should then see web links related to that chapter. Click here!