Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Liability in contract
- Contracts
- "A set of promises that the law will enforce"
- Don't have to be written down
- Can be made in writing
- Can be made orally and partly written
- Some contracts HAVE to be in writing e.g. sale of land, selling copyright, guarantees
- An agreement is not a contract if it was not intended to be enforceable by law
- An agreement is not a contract if it was not supported by consideration
- Elements
- An agreement freely made
- Offer
- indication that a person is willing to enter
into a contract on particular terms
- Can be made to the world at large
- Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Company
- Advertisements are not regarded as offers -
taken to be invitations to treat
- Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain
v Boots Cash Chemist
- Judge ruled that display is offer to treat, basket
is offer to chemist, checkout is acceptance
- Puffs
- Exaggeration made by a salesperson or found
in an advertisement that concerns the quality
of goods offered for sale
- Presents opinions rather than facts, not
considered a legally binding promise
- Offer may be withdrawn at any time PRIOR to acceptance
(once acceptance occurs the contract is made)
- Acceptance
- Accept offer
- Requires: Acceptance of PRECISE TERMS (otherwise its a counter offer),
communication of acceptance
- Offer can only be accepted by the person to whom it is directed
- Rejection of offer
- Once rejected the offer cannot be later accepted
- Counter offer
- occurs when precise terms are not accepted but offeree still wants to negotiate
- Intention that the agreement may be enforced by law
- If an agreement is made in a business context
it will be assumed to bring with it an intention
to create legal relations except where there is
clear evidence of a contrary intention
- Balfour v Balfour
- Husband/Wife, domestic/social. Husband promised to send $30 a
month but they grew apart, she still wanted payments. No
enforceable agreement
- Consideration
- The price paid by one party for the
other's promise to do something
- Not the same as performance
(of that promise)
- Past consideration is not valid consideration
- Re McArdle
- Promise of payment given AFTER improvements had
already been made = past consideration = not valid
- Deeds
- A way to avoid the need for consideration but
still create an enforceable obligation
- Other factors that may result in the contract being
unenforceable, subject to cancellation/modification
- Lack of genuine consent (gun to head)
- Lack of contractual capacity
- Under legal age (18)
- Drunk/drugged
- Mental disabilities
- Subject matter of contract is illegal
- misrepresentation/mistake which can
affect genuine consent
- e.g. selling an old painting and realising its a picasso