Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law Mercer University, Atlanta.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Contracts and Contract Law
Advertisements

Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law Mercer University, Atlanta.
Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law.
Contract Law.
Introduction to Contract Law MBAD 5191: Legal Environment in Business.
CHAPTER 7 INSURANCE CONTRACTS. CONTRACT TERMINOLOGY  A CONTRACT is a legally binding agreement creating rights and duities for those who are parties.
Chapter 8— Introduction to Contracts – Classifications, Terminology and Formation REED SHEDD PAGNATTARO MOREHEAD F I F T E E N T H E D I T I O N McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
CHAPTERCHAPTER McGraw-Hill/Irwin©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Offer ONEONE.
Copyright © 2009 by Jeffrey Pittman.  A contract is an agreement between two or more parties that can be enforced in a court of law  Contract law protects.
Chapter 11 Formation of Traditional And Online Contracts
Business and its Legal Environment (Mgmt 246) Contracts (Chapters 9, 10 and 11) Professor Charles H. Smith Spring 2011.
THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing Prentice Hall Ch The Legal Environment of Business A Critical Thinking.
Chapter 7 Contracts: Classification, Agreement, and Consideration
Jody Blanke Professor of Computer Information Systems and Law
© OnCourse Learning Chapter 7 : Contract Law. © OnCourse Learning A legally enforceable agreement to do (or not to do) a particular thing.
Chapter 7 – How Contracts Arise
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Business Law Chapter 1: An Introduction to Contracts.
Business Law II Professor Pamela Gershuny Fall 2011.
Contracts: Concepts, Terms, and the Agreement
ACTG 6100 Week Three: Ethics, Contracts. Law and Ethics In some cases, law sets the moral minimum Sometimes, the law does not address the ethical problems.
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.
Contract Law Jody Blanke Professor of Computer Information Systems and Law.
1 A Contract Defined “A contract is a promise or a set of promises for the breach of which the law gives a remedy or the performance of which the law in.
ENTERING INTO CONTRACTS Sunny Hills High School Business Law Mrs. Larsen.
Rights and Duties of the Funeral Director Sources of Duties 1)Laws and Regulations 2)Common Law 3)Funeral Contract.
Real Estate Contracts.
Unit 6 Contracts. Definition n An agreement between two or more parties enforceable in court.
Law of Contracts. WHAT MUST BE IN A CONTRACT? Offer and acceptance Genuine assent Legality Consideration Capacity Writing.
1-1 CHAPTER 6 MATERIALS TO SUPPLEMENT TEXTBOOK J. Pittman, Instructor.
Business Law - Week 3 Class Agenda Other information: Good Samaritan Law | International Law Review Week 2 Case Study Break Discussion: Contracts continued.
Chapter 7. Georgia Real Estate An Introduction to the Profession Eighth Edition Chapter 7 Contract Law.
Real Estate Principles and Practices Chapter 6 Contracts and Business Law © 2014 OnCourse Learning.
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.
How Contracts Arise Chapter #5.
Introduction to Contracts. “The whole duty of government is to prevent crime and to preserve contracts.” Lord Melbourne, British Prime Minister.
Agreement Chapter 10. Agreement Usually evinced by the existence of an offer and acceptance Requirements of the offer –Serious objective intent –Terms.
THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS A Critical Thinking Approach Fourth Edition Nancy K. Kubasek Bartley A. Brennan M. Neil Browne Nancy K. Kubasek Bartley.
How Contracts Arise What Are Contracts? Any agreement enforceable by law.
Contract Law: A Beginning CHAPTER SIX. 6 | 2 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. What a Contract Is A contract is a legally enforceable.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. Contract Law Chapter 7 © 2012 Cengage Learning In This Chapter You will be introduced to contract law and how a contract is.
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.
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,
Real Estate Principles and Practices Chapter 6 Contracts and Business Law © 2010 by South-Western, Cengage Learning.
Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law Mercer University, Atlanta.
Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law Mercer University, Atlanta.
Chapter 5 How Contracts Arise. Contract: Any agreement enforceable at law.
Chapter 9 Formation of Traditional And E-Contracts.
Contract Contracts are agreements between two or more parties that create obligations. Characteristics of Contracts Valid, void, voidable or unenforceable.
OFFERS, CONTRACTS AND RELATED ISSUES: EFFECTIVE CONTRACT WRITING.
© 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.
 I can explain and identify all five elements of a valid contract.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall 1 AGREEMENT © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall CHAPTER 10.
The Purchase Contract. CONTRACTS Offer Acceptance Consideration Defenses Writing Required? Valid Contract Yes No No Contract Void or Voidable Contract.
Copyright © 2004 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited 1 PART 3 THE LAW OF CONTRACTS  Chapter 6 – An Introduction to the Legal Relationship Prepared by Douglas.
Contracts Review Chapters 7-12.
Contract Law Jody Blanke, Professor
Contract Law Jody Blanke Distinguished Professor of
Essentials of the legal environment today, 5e
Gary Nelson Covering chapter 7 in the text.
LAW ELEMENTS OF A CONTRACT.
Contract Law Jody Blanke Distinguished Professor of
Contract Law Jody Blanke, Professor
Chapter 7 Part II Exam review
Contract Law Jody Blanke, Professor
Presentation transcript:

Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law Mercer University, Atlanta

Contract Law As Private Law Willing parties can agree to do most anything Freedom of contract “Meeting of the minds”

Private Law Contract between Major League Baseball and the Players Association - Collective Bargaining Agreement (311 page PDF file)Collective Bargaining Agreement (311 page PDF file) “free agent” “salary cap” “luxury tax” NHL (a league that used to play ice hockey in Canada and the U.S.)

Uniform Commercial Code Poster child of uniform laws Adopted in 49½ states Very successful Facilitates the ease of doing business First place to look for “the law” then, other state statutes then, state case (common) law – safety net

Basic Requirements An agreement between the parties Consideration Capacity Legality

Agreement – The Offer Offeror must have intention to be bound by offer e.g., kick the tire Terms must be reasonably definite and certain can be written, oral or implied can come from prior dealings or usage of trade Offer must be communicated to offeree e.g., reward for lost dog

Figurative “Death” of an Offer “Natural causes” – lapse of time “Suicide” – revocation “Murder” – rejection Counteroffer = rejection + offer “Execution” – by operation of law change in law terminates offer

Literal Death of An Offer The offeror dies The offeree dies Destruction of subject matter

Acceptance At common law – “mirror image rule” UCC – more relaxed (and reasonable) “battle of the forms” Generally effective upon receipt exception – “mailbox rule”

Bilateral and Unilateral Contracts Bilateral – a promise for a promise e.g., Joe promises to paint Bill’s house and Bill promises to pay Joe $1000 Unilateral – a promise for an act e.g., Susan promises to pay $500 to the first person who scales the outside of the Business and Education Building performance of the act is acceptance

Consideration Each party must provide something of value Money, property, services, forebearance e.g., Hamer v. Sidway – the “rich uncle” case e.g., Jennings v. KSCS Courts will not examine the adequacy of the consideration

Capacity Age – law protects minors Voidable contract Exception for necessaries Mental competency Void contract Voidable contract Intoxication

Legality Contracts must have a legal purpose cannot take out a “contract” for that noisy neighbor cannot purchase a gram of cocaine gambling? e.g., Durado Beach Hotel v. Jernigan

Genuiness of Assent Duress – “gun to the head” Undue Influence Fraud Mistake Unilateral – generally does not excuse performance exception – if nonmistaken party knew of the mistake Mutual – generally does excuse performance no meeting of the minds

Third-Party Rights Each party receives certain rights or benefits in a contract Each party undertakes certain duties or obligations Generally, rights can be assigned to third parties Generally, duties can be delegated to third parties exception – when performance depends upon personal skills

Statute of Frauds “An oral contract is as legally valid as a written contract unless the law requires it to be in writing” “…as good as…” if executed before 100 clergy people of all faiths willing to come to court and testify

Must Be In Writing Contract to transfer an interest in real property Contract that cannot be performed within 1 year Contract to pay the debts of another Contract made in contemplation of marriage dowry agreement prenuptial agreement Contract for the sale of goods greater than $500 UCC drafters recommend increase to $5,000

Parol Evidence Rule Court will not permit evidence of prior or contemporaneous oral statements if there is a complete written agreement exception – ambiguities Morals of the story read the contract – get it in writing

Integration Clause “I have read the above agreement and understand that it represents the entire agreement between the parties.” Morals of the story read the contract – get it in writing