Acceptance – Termination/Revocation

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

Formation of Contract Offer + Acceptance = Contract.
Business Law: Ch 6 Offer and Acceptance.
Business Law: Ch 6 Offer and Acceptance.
CHAPTERCHAPTER McGraw-Hill/Irwin©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Offer ONEONE.
Chapter 121 Termination of an Offer By Offeror By Offeree Revocation Prior to Acceptance* Death or Incapacity Time Limitations Placed in the Offer Rejection.
Chapter 7 – How Contracts Arise
Business Law Chapter 1: An Introduction to Contracts.
Contracts: Concepts, Terms, and the Agreement
10-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
ENTERING INTO CONTRACTS
ES 2.00 UNDERSTAND CONTRACT LAW
© 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 10 CONTRACTUAL AGREEMENT: MUTUAL ASSENT DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment (8 th Ed.)
Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts. Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts.
Business Law Chapter 7 Review Game. Creation of Offers Termination of Offers Acceptance Final Jeopardy Jeopardy.
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning BUSINESS LAW Twomey Jennings 1 st Ed. Twomey & Jennings BUSINESS LAW Chapter 13 Formation.
Business Law II Professor Pamela Gershuny Fall 2000.
Introduction to Contracts and Their Formation OBE-118, Section 10 Fall 2004 “It’s a deal, I’ll take it”
Agreement Offer and Acceptance Chapter 2. Offer  Offer: A promise or commitment to do or refrain from doing some specified thing in the future. Offer.
Chapter 10 Offer and Acceptance. What is a Contract? n Contract - an agreement that is enforceable by law n Offeror - the person who makes an offer n.
Meeting of the Minds The parties can form a contract only if they had a meeting of the minds. – They must understand each other and intend to reach an.
FORMATION OF CONTRACTS: OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE Used by permission. For Educational purposes only.
Copyright © 2008 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 13 Contracts: Offer and Acceptance Twomey Jennings Anderson’s.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Introduction to Contracts and Agreement.
Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law Mercer University, Atlanta.
Chapter 5 How Contracts Arise. Contract: Any agreement enforceable at law.
CHAPTER 5 Contracts. Contract- is any agreement enforceable by law Offer- is a proposal by one party to another intended to create a legally binding agreement.
Contract Contracts are agreements between two or more parties that create obligations. Characteristics of Contracts Valid, void, voidable or unenforceable.
Section 4.2 How a Contract Begins. Section 4.2 How a Contract Begins To be valid, an offer must be: made seriously definite and certain communicated to.
Contract Law: Acceptance Objective 3.01 Understand requirements of each element of a contract.
Business Law and the Regulation of Business Chapter 10: Mutual Assent By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall 1 AGREEMENT © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall CHAPTER 10.
Copyright © 2004 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited 1 PART 3 THE LAW OF CONTRACTS  Chapter 6 – An Introduction to the Legal Relationship Prepared by Douglas.
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.
6-2 Termination of Offers
UNIT – I FORMATION OF CONTRACT
Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts. Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts.
David P. Twomey - Boston College
Chapter 6 Offer and Acceptance
Jeopardy T/F 1 T/F 2 FIB 1 FIB 2 Random Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100
Gary Nelson Covering chapter 7 in the text.
Contracts Defenses to Enforcement
Contract Damages and Remedies
Implied-in-Law Conditions and (contrary) Substantial Performance
Contracts Rights in Third Parties
Contract in Writing Required in Some Cases
Contracts Interpretation of Terms
Contracts Interpretation of Terms
Ways to Avoid Forfeiture, i.e., Not Apply the Law of Conditions
Contracts Defenses to Enforcement
Contracts Rights in Third Parties
Breach of Contract Issues
Consideration - General
Contracts Rights in Third Parties
Consideration - Substitutes
Acceptance – U.C.C. Sale of Goods – Battle of the Forms
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS CONTRACTS
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS CONTRACTS
Implied-in-Law Terms for Sales of Goods – U.C.C.
Contract Damages and Remedies
Chapter 6 Offer and Acceptance
Sufficient Specificity of Essential Terms
Professor Paul J. Carrier
Creation, Timing of Operation, and Mechanics
Contract Formation – Elements of Formation
Current intent (to accept)
Contracts Interpretation of Terms
B4-2 Termination of Offers.
LESSON 7-2 Termination of Offers.
Presentation transcript:

Acceptance – Termination/Revocation Contract Formation Acceptance – Termination/Revocation Revocation (express or implied by actions/facts) by offeror. Non-occurrence of a required pre-condition (e.g. “I offer to sell only if I get that new job next week”). Lapse of time (as stated, or reasonable time if not specifically stated). Rejection (if offeree conveys, for example, “I will not buy that”). Counter – offer (turns former offeree into the new offeror). Death or incapacity of either party terminates an offer – does not bind either’s estate. Mailbox Rule: acceptance effective on dispatch, but not for option contracts or if receipt of acceptance is required by the offer, as well some strange complications where offeree sends acceptance first but then fires off a rejection – which did offeror get)first? Common law option contracts and U.C.C. firm offers prevent revocation – and unlike common law options, firm offer does not need distinct consideration. For unilateral contracts, beginning performance (not mere preparation) creates option giving reasonable time to finish – cannot revoke. By now, understanding of hybrid or mixed contracts that are part sale of goods and part common law services – the predominance test used in Florida and other states – as wel; that a minority applies respective law to that part of a contract that coincides with it (good or service). Death or incapacity automatically revokes offer, but would not so operate for a formed contract – a person’s estate (through legal guardian or trustee) would be bound after either. © 2018 Paul J. Carrier, Paul J Carrier, LLC Blue – Category Recognition; White – Specific Category; Yellow – “Black Letter” Rules (to be memorized); Green – Main Factual Issues – Analysis; Red – Upper-Level, Integrated Comprehension