CONTRACTS. A contract is a: – Promise or set of promises, – And if someone breaches or breaks contract – You can sue and the law may provide remedy –

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Contract Law.
Advertisements

Sales Contracts.  Sale – Contract in which ownership of goods transfers immediately from the seller to the buyer  Ownership – Collection of rights that.
Chap 2. CONFLICT IN THE MARKET PLACE THE LAW OF CONTRACT Has been developed over the years from decisions of judges to regulate how businesses should be.
Business Law: Ch 6 Offer and Acceptance.
CHAPTERCHAPTER McGraw-Hill/Irwin©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Offer ONEONE.
Objective: Understand what must be in a contract. Know how an offer can be terminated.
Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. (1893)
Chapter 6: Contract Law Law in Society
UNIT 4: Consumer and Housing Law Chapter 23 Contracts
Legality, Consent, and Writing. “A verbal contract isn’t worth the paper it’s written on.” Samuel Goldwyn, Hollywood producer “I am not young enough to.
Chapter 7 – How Contracts Arise
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Contract Law Chapter 6.
Business Law Chapter 1: An Introduction to Contracts.
CONTRACTS. A contract is a: – Promise or set of promises, – And if someone breaches or breaks contract – You can sue and the law may provide remedy –
Chapter 7 – Offer and Acceptance
CONTRACTS.
10-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
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.
ENTERING INTO CONTRACTS
Contracts BCS-LEB-4 The student identifies rights and responsibilities of contract negotiations. BCS-LEB-8 The student explains the legal rules that apply.
Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts Chapter 19.
Mutual Assent- Offer and Acceptance
ENTERING INTO CONTRACTS Sunny Hills High School Business Law Mrs. Larsen.
Lesson 6: Contract Law Principles of California Real Estate.
Real Estate Contracts.
 A contract is an agreement between two or more persons to exchange something of value  What does it do?  It legally binds parties to do what they.
Contracts. What is a Contract? An agreement that is enforceable by law Must have an offer and acceptance on mutually satisfactory terms Intent is more.
CONTRACTS. CHAPTER 4: What is a Contract? Contract is any agreement enforceable by law. Not all agreements are contracts Agreeing to take out the trash.
1-1 CHAPTER 6 MATERIALS TO SUPPLEMENT TEXTBOOK J. Pittman, Instructor.
Chapter 7. Georgia Real Estate An Introduction to the Profession Eighth Edition Chapter 7 Contract Law.
Contract Basics Business Law. From tort law to contract law TortContract What binds individuals Laws of society, as defined by statutes and precedents.
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning 1 I. Introduction I. Introduction II. Elements of a contract II. Elements of a contract.
Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts. Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts.
Introduction to Contracts. “The whole duty of government is to prevent crime and to preserve contracts.” Lord Melbourne, British Prime Minister.
CHAPTER 10 STUDY GUIDE FOR TEST. CONTRACTS ARE….. Legal links between producers and consumers that help to get most of the worlds work done.
Chapter 7 Contract Formation Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent.
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.
Agreement By Dhoni Yusra. Introduction Contracts are voluntary agreements between the parties. One party makes an offer that is accepted by the other.
How Contracts Arise What Are Contracts? Any agreement enforceable by law.
© South-Western Educational Publishing GOALS LESSON 2.2 OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE  Know how to create a valid offer  Describe how an offer can be terminated.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Introduction to Contracts and Agreement.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 10 Agreement Chapter 10 Agreement.
Week 04 Agreements and Contracts. Contracts A contract is a legally enforceable agreement between two or more competent persons. A valid contract is one.
Nature and Terminology and Agreement in Traditional and E- Contracts Chapter 11 & 12.
CONTRACT LAW LAW II CONTRACT LAW. INTRODUCTION CONTRACT: An agreement between two or more parties that creates obligations enforceable by law. A contract.
Bell Ringer What should a contract be based on? What things should be included in a contract? What things could make a contract no longer applicable?
Chapter 10 Contracts—Agreement. 2 Introduction Agreement = offer and acceptance. Once an agreement is reached, if the other elements of a contract are.
Chapter 5 How Contracts Arise. Contract: Any agreement enforceable at law.
 CONTRACT Legally enforceable Between two or more parties  We commonly encounter contractual agreements as we carryout our daily routines and activities.
OFFERS, CONTRACTS AND RELATED ISSUES: EFFECTIVE CONTRACT WRITING.
GOULD’S “MCQ’s in the MORNING” Multiple Choice Program: CONTRACT LAW QUESTIONS, © 2012 GOULD’S LEGAL EDUCATION, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
2011©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.. Contracts and Damages 2011©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.
© 2011 South-Western | Cengage Learning GOALS LESSON 2.1 CONTRACT LAW BASICS Name the six essential elements of a legally enforceable contract Identify.
Chapter 6 Offer and Acceptance (6.1 Creation of Offers; 6.2 Termination of Offers, 6.3 Acceptances) Unit 2 Contract Law.
Copyright © 2010 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. and the Legal Environment, 10 th edition by Richard.
Modern Real Estate Practice in Illinois Eighth Edition Chapter 11: Real Estate Contracts ©2014 Kaplan, Inc.
Chapter 9 Contracts. Definition of a Contract Definition A contract is an agreement that is enforceable by a court of law. A contract is a promise or.
CHAPTER 6 OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE. 6-1 Creation of Offers What Must Be in a Contract? Contracts – An agreement between two or more parties that create obligations.
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.
Ch. 7 Consumer Law and Contracts 7-1 Sales Contracts.
Contracts Chapter 23. Kinds of Civil Law TortsContracts What binds individuals Laws of society, as defined by statutes and precedents Specific Agreements.
Offer and Acceptance Chapter 6.
Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts. Section 4.1 Agreements and Contracts.
Chapter 5: How Contracts Arise
LAW ELEMENTS OF A CONTRACT.
Objectives Students will be able to list and describe the elements of a contract. Students will be able to read and understand the elements of contracts.
Business Law Rustemeyer
Legally Binding Agreements
Presentation transcript:

CONTRACTS

A contract is a: – Promise or set of promises, – And if someone breaches or breaks contract – You can sue and the law may provide remedy – Court wants to determine intent of parties.

THE ELEMENTS OF A CONTRACT? 1. Offer 2. Acceptance 3. Consideration Mental ability to negotiate

Offeror & Offeree Offeror = the person who makes the Offer. Offeree= the person who receives the Offer. Buyer- Seller

2 Types of Contracts 1. Bilateral - Offeree must only promise to perform (“promise for a promise”). (most contracts) Example:

2. Unilateral - Offeree can accept the offer only by completing the contract performance (Ad in paper/reward/lottery) Cannot take back offer or revoked once performance has begun. Offeree isn’t obligated to do anything, he learns of Offeror’s offer and then performs.

Unilateral Contracts: Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. (D) manufactured and sold The Carbolic Smoke Ball. The company placed ads in various newspapers offering a reward of 100 pounds to any person who used the smoke ball three times per day as directed and contracted influenza, colds, or any other disease. After seeing the ad Carlill (P) purchased it and used it as directed. Carlill contracted influenza and made a claim for the reward. Carbolic Smoke Ball refused to pay and Carlill sued for damages arising from breach of contract.

AGREEMENT. Agreement = offer and acceptance. Parties must show mutual understanding to terms of contract.

INTENTION OF THE OFFER. Would a reasonable person in the Offeree’s position conclude an offer had been made. Offers made in anger, jest, or undue excitement are usually not offers.

To Terminate an Offer – 1. Revoke Offer; or by – 2 Operation of Law. – (contract can specify that offer ends on a certain date)

TERMINATION CONT……. 1. Revoke Offer: – Offer can be withdrawn anytime before Offeree accepts the offer. – Rejection of the offer by the Offeree: A counteroffer by the Offeree is a rejection of the original offer and making of a new offer.

Example Offer Rejection Counter-Offer

B. OPERATION OF LAW Lapse of Time. – Offer terminates when the period of time specified in the offer has passed. – If no time period for acceptance, offer terminates reasonable period of time. Destruction of the Subject Matter - car.

II. Consideration CONSIDERATION MUST HAVE A VALUE!

1. Illegal Contract Illegal contract – never enforceable – The agreement must not call for the performance of any act that is criminal, tortious, or otherwise opposed to public policy.

2. MINOR Minor – Not enforceable

3. DRUNK- depends DEPENDS – NOT AUTOMATIC Lack of mental capacity at the time the contract is being made. Case 9.1 Lucy v. Zehmer (1954). (if terms are reasonable, it’s okay when drunken and make an offer)

Lucy v. Zehmer Case 9.1 On December 20, 1952, Lucy entered the restaurant owned by Zehmer with a bottle of whiskey in his hand. He and Zehmer consumed a significant quantity of distilled spirits and discussed the possible sale of the farm. Zehmer wrote a note stating simply "We hereby agree to sell to W. O. Lucy the Ferguson Farm complete for $50,000.00, title satisfactory to buyer". The note was signed by Zehmer and his wife.

Court Ruling – SOLD!!!! Court ruling that Zehmer was not intoxicated to the point of being unable to comprehend the nature and consequences of the instrument he executed…..

ADHESION Contracts Adhesion Contracts. – Preprinted contract in which the adhering party has no opportunity to negotiate the terms of the contract. “Standard-form.” “Take-it-or-leave-it” adhesion contracts. Binding Arbitration

STATUTE OF FRAUDS To be enforceable, these contract MUST be in writing and signed: – 1. Contracts involving land. – 2. Contracts involving “One Year Rule.” – 3. Promise made for marriage. – 4. Contracts for the sale of goods priced at $500 or more.

Must be in Writing 1.Contract that cannot be completed in one year. Ben agreed to create a reality TV show for a production company. Ben and the production company agreed to split profits equally, however they never wrote down their agreement. 2. Contracts for Marriage 3. Contracts for sale of goods over $ Land / Real Estate Agreement may not be enforceable by Court

Question So does a contract have to be written? – Answer. NO! – ONLY CONTRACTS UNDER THE STATUTE OF FRAUDS MUST BE IN WRITING!

Not in writing – what does that mean So what does this mean for a person running a small business? It means that: If you place an oral order for goods in the amount of $1000 and the seller fails to deliver the goods, court won’t enforce agreement because not in writing. If you make a contract to purchase land, the contract is not in writing and the seller decides to sell the land to someone else, court will not enforce agreement.

WHAT HAPPENS AFTER THE CONTRACT. Okay, so do we have a CONTRACT. Now what happens? What if someone doesn’t do what they are supposed to do? What if I want to get out of it?

Breach- does not complete contract satifactorily Sue for Damages. Specific Performance = force other party to complete contract.

SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE Forcing other party to complete contract – Land – sell land – Really, would you want someone to provide a service if they were already upset? May lead to more problems.

Duty to Mitigate Damages When breach of contract occurs, the innocent injured party is held to a duty to reduce the damages that he or she suffered.

Mitigating Damages You sign a lease. After 6 months, you move out. Landlord says you owe 6 more months. Landlord has a DUTY to Mitigate (reduce) your damages. Therefore Landlord has to try to rent out YOUR apartment. If they do, then you only owe for damages for time not rented.

Except for leases – Must have in contract that you will get attorney fees if the other person breaks or breaches the contract.