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Published byAllyson Byrd Modified over 8 years ago
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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 agreement. – A judge will make an objective assessment of any disagreements about whether a contract was made -- whether or not a reasonable person would conclude that there was an agreement, based on the parties’ conduct.
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Offer Problems with Intent – Invitation to bargain is not an offer. – Price quote is generally not an offer. – An advertisement is generally not an offer. – A letter of intent may or may not be an offer, depending on the writer’s intent. – Placing an item up for auction is not an offer, it is merely a request for an offer. Problems with Definiteness – The term of the offer must be definite. An offer is an act or statement that proposes definite terms and permits the other party to create a contract by accepting those terms.
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The UCC has provisions for supplying some missing contract terms. UCC and Open Terms Open Price – The UCC establishes a price, based on market value or valuation by a neutral party. Output and Requirements Provisions – An output contract obligates a seller to sell all of his output to one buyer, who agrees to buy it. – A requirements contract obligates a buyer to obtain all of his needed goods from the seller.
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UCC and Open Terms (cont’d) Delivery, Time, and Payment – Usually, delivery is at the seller’s business, time must be reasonable and payment is due upon receipt of goods. Warranties – An implied warranty of merchantability, means that the goods must be of at least average, passable quality in the trade. – An implied warranty of fitness means the goods are suitable for a particular purpose.
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Termination of Offers Termination by Revocation – Effective when the offeree receives it. Firm Offers and Revocability – Common Law Rule Revocation of a firm offer is effective if the offeree receives it before he accepts. – Option Contract The offeror may not revoke an offer during the option period. – Sale of Goods A writing signed by a merchant, offering to hold an offer open, may not be revoked.
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Termination of Offers (cont’d) Termination by Rejection – If an offeree rejects an offer, the rejection immediately terminates the offer. Termination by Expiration – When an offer specifies a time limit for acceptance, that period if binding. – If the offer specified no time limit, the offeree has a reasonable period in which to accept. Termination by Operation of Law – Death or mental incapacity of the offeror terminates an offer. – Destruction of subject matter terminates offer.
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Acceptance The offeree must say or do something to accept. – In a bilateral contract, the offeree generally must accept by making a promise. – In a unilateral contract, the offeree must accept by performing. – If the offer is ambiguous, the offeree may accept by either a promise or performance. Mirror Image Rule (Common Law) – Requires that acceptance be on precisely the same terms as the offer.
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UCC and the Battle of Forms An offeree may include in the acceptance terms that are additional to or different from those in the offer. – Additional terms are those that bring up new issues. If both parties are merchants, the additional terms will generally become part of the contract. – Different terms are those that contradict terms in the offer. The majority of states hold that different (contradictory) terms cancel each other out.
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Communication of Acceptance Medium and Manner of Acceptance – If an offer demands acceptance in a particular medium or manner, the offeree must follow those requirements. – If the offer does not specify a type of acceptance, the offeree may accept in any reasonable manner and medium. Time of Acceptance: The Mailbox Rule – An accceptance is generally effective upon dispatch, meaning the moment it is out of the offeree’s control.
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