Agreement, Consideration, and Intention Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the objective approach of the court to an agreement?

A

What a reasonable person would say was the intent of the parties having regard to all the circumstances.

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2
Q

With contracts, do you look into actual intent of a man’s mind? Will saying “I did not intend to contract” negate the contract?

A

No - you look at what he said and did

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3
Q

If someone says they “may be prepared to sell”, will this be sufficiently clear and certain to be an offer?

A

No - will merely be first step in negotiations - “will sell” would be intention to be bound

This is certainty of offer

Gibson - City wrote to tenant saying council ‘may be prepared to sell house at purchase price of £x’ - was not a binding conttact once the tenant completed the form

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4
Q

What is the difference between unilateral and bilateral contracts?

A

Bilateral: Each party assumes obligation to other party by making a promise to do something

‘Unilateral’ (see note): One party makes an offer calling for an act to be performed by one or more parties. Actual performance will constitute acceptance e.g. “if you deliver a watch to me in the next ten days I will immediately pay you £100”

NB unilateral contracts don’t actually exist - is just a contract formed as a result of a unilateral offer

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5
Q

What is the difference between an offer and an invitation to treat?

A

Offer: An undertaking to be contractually bound by terms in the event of unconditional acceptance

Invitation to treat: A first step in negotiations which may or may not lead to an offer

Types: advertisements, display of goods (in shop window), invitations to tender (company/public body wants to purchase big thing), auctions

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6
Q

What is the general rule regarding what advertisements are?

A

They are statements inviting further negotiations/invitations to treat

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7
Q

When is an advertisement is not an invitation to treat?

What is the exception for advertisements?

A

Where an advertisement amounts to a unilateral offer

Think of a lost property poster!

Carbolic Smoke Ball - issued advertisement offering to pay £100 to any person who used a smoke ball for a specified period but still contracted influenza; they deposited £1000 in bank account to show sincerity - Ds bound to pay money to someone who contracted influenza as this was a unilateral offer: clear prescribed act, performance of which constituted acceptance + deposit of £1,000 + certainty of language

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8
Q

What are the 2 requirements of a unilateral offer as per Carbolic?

A
  1. Prescribed act; and
  2. Clear intention to be bound
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9
Q

Are price-marked goods displayed in a shop window an offer? Is this different when there is a ‘special offer’ or in a self-service store?

A

No - will always be an invitation to treat

Would be problematic re minors + alcohol if it was an offer

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10
Q

What is the general rule on invitations to tender? Must the requestor accept the most competitive?

Where a party wishes to purchase major item/service - requestor invites tenders (offers) from those interested

A

Will be invitations to treat - requestor can accept or reject any tender even if most competitive

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11
Q

What is the general rule on auction sales?

A

Will be an invitation to treat - acceptance of bidder’s offer is indicated by fall of auctioneer’s hammer

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12
Q

What are the exceptions for an invitation to tender and auctions?

A

Where the invitation to tender expressly undertakes to accept the highest/lowest bid (is a unilateral contract)

In an auction without reserve where seller promises to sell to the highest bidder (cf auctions with reserve; if no bid made above price seller keeps goods)

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13
Q

Where there is an auction without reserve, how can the auctioneer be sued for breach of contract if they refuse to sell to the highest bona fide bidder? Is the bidder entitled to the goods?

A

Because there are two contracts…
1. Bilateral contract where bidder makes offer
2. Unilateral contract based on promise that auction will be without reserve

The highest bidder is not entitled to the goods as this is dictated by bilateral contract, but entitled to compensation by damages

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14
Q

How can an offer be terminated?

3 ways

A
  1. Rejection
  2. Lapse of time (passage of time or death)
  3. Revocation (before acceptance)
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15
Q

Once an offer has been rejected, can it be accepted?

A

Not unless offeror makes same offer again

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16
Q

When will rejection take effect?

A

Not until it is actually communicated to the offeror - only then do they know they are free from offer

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17
Q

What happens when a counter-offer is accepted?

In terms of the original offer

A

The original offer is deemed to have been rejected and the counter-offers terms become those of the contract

Last person to assert their own terms and conditions likely to prevail

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18
Q

What is the difference between a counter-offer and a request for information? What is the effect on acceptance of a request for further information?

A

Request for information is merely seeking clarification of extent/terms of offer/ascertaining if offeror would consent to changing ancillary aspects of offer = original offer remains open for acceptance

Stevenson - D offered to sell C 3,800 tons of iron at 40s net cash per ton, C asked if they would accept 40 for delivery over two months - C received no reply and sent telegram accepting original offer - court held C’s response was not a counter-offer but an enquiry (request for further info) = binding contract made when C sent telegram accepting offer

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19
Q

When will an offer lapse (and become incapable of acceptance) by passage of time or by death of a party?

A
  • Passage of time: where acceptance not made within period prescribe by offeror (or if not prescribed, a reasonable time)
  • Death of a party: if the offeree is unaware of offeror’s death, it will probably not lapse
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20
Q

If the offeree dies prior to acceptance, can their representatives accept the offer?

A

No

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21
Q

When can an offer be revoked?

A

At any time before acceptance

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22
Q

When will communication of revocation be effective from? Does the mode of communication matter? What are the rules on post?

A

Effective only upon actual notice reaching offeree.

Mode of communication does not matter, but if made by post it will be from when offeree receives (not when posted!)

Revocation effective so long as offeror shows clear intention and notice reaches offeree

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23
Q

What 2 things are needed for revocation to be shown by conduct or a TP?

A
  1. Clear intention and
  2. Notice reaches reached offeree
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24
Q

What are the 4 rules in relation to acceptance?

Can anyone accept? What is the rule? How does one accept?

A
  1. Must be in response to an offer (i.e. only person to whom offer is made can accept, no eavesdroppers)
  2. Must be unqualified (mirror-image rule; correspond exactly with offer terms)
  3. May be necessary to follow (clearly) prescribed mode of acceptance
  4. Acceptance must be communicated
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25
Q

Will the prescribed mode of acceptance always be mandatory? If it is not mandatory, what other form of acceptance will bind offeror?

A
  • Only mandatory if particularly clear words
  • If not mandatory: another mode of acceptance no less advantageous to offeror will bind them
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26
Q

If there is intention to accept but no communication what happens? Can a TP inform of acceptance? Will silence amount to acceptance?

A
  • Intention but no communication = no contract (i.e. mental assent not acceptance)
  • TP can inform of acceptance under authority of offeree
  • Silence cannot amount to acceptance
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27
Q

How do the rules of revocation change for a unilateral offer?

Re partial performance

A

Possible to revoke any time prior to completion, but will be under implied obligation not to revoke once (partial) performance has commenced

Errington - father agreed to give house to son and daughter-in-law if they paid off mortgage on house - couple made several payments when dad sought to revoke offer - court held promise could not be revoked after instalments began and continued to be paid

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28
Q

How is revocation possible where an offer is made to the world?

A

Almost impossible and only effective if offeror takes reasonable steps to bring revocation to attention of those who saw offer

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29
Q

What is the postal rule?

Re acceptance

A

Acceptance takes effect from moment letter of acceptance is properly posted not when received by offeror

Properly posted = letter box, hands of authorised postal operative

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30
Q

What is the effect on a letter being delayed/lost in the post on the postal rule?

A

Nothing - rule will still apply

31
Q

When does the postal rule not apply?

3 situations

A
  • If not contemplated post would be used (e.g. prompt acceptance required)
  • If incorrectly addressed
  • If disapplied by offeror (ousts postal rule e.g. requires receipt of acceptance)

Implied condition of prompt acceptance means post would be unreasonable

32
Q

Does the postal rule apply to revocation the same way?

A

No - revocation of an offer must be received to be effective

33
Q

What are the rules with instantaneous communication?

A

Acceptance takes place where it is received by the offeror

34
Q

Where acceptance is communicated by instantaneous means, what happens where the acceptance is not fully communicated due to the fault of the offeror?

E.g. poor mobile reception and do not ask acceptance to be repeated

A

Offeror may be prevented from saying they did not receive acceptance

Cf not received without fault of offeror = no contract

35
Q

When email is by acceptance and is sent in ordinary office hours on a Friday, but is not seen until Monday, when will it be received (and thus acceptance effective)?

A

Would have been received on the Friday

Offeree reasonably assumed there was effective communication

36
Q

What about outside of ordinary office hours and emails re acceptance?

I.e. If aen email is sent in the late hours of Friday?

A

A message sent in late hours of Friday would be received at start of business on Monday

Especially important in international communications

37
Q

How do you communicate acceptance of a unilateral contract?

A

No need for communication; performance is sufficient!

38
Q

Summary on when:
1. Rejection
2. Revocation
3. Acceptance
happens

A
  1. Communicated to offeror
  2. Effective upon notice reaching offeror
  3. Postal rule = when posted, instantaneous communication = when received by offeror
39
Q

Rules on certainty of agreement? Will the courts not enforce if they doubt certainty?

A

Only an agreement which is sufficiently certain can be enforced by court.

Applies an objective test

Not enforcing is a last resort, courts will look to enforce agreement reflecting intentions of the parties.

40
Q

Will an agreement on ‘hire-purchase’ terms (alone) be certain enough to be enforced?

A

No - so many different hire-purchase agreements that this was too vague to be an enforceable contract

41
Q

Will an agreement to buy ‘X of fair specification’ be certain enough to be enforceable?

Hillas - ‘timber of fair specification’

A

Potentially yes - if words could be given a reasonable meaning (esp in light of previous dealings)

42
Q

What is the basic rule of consideration?

A

To be able to enforce a promise made to you, you must be able to show you agreed to provide something in return

Consideration = some right, interest, profit or benefit accruing to one party or some forbearance, detriment, loss or responsibility given, suffered or undertaken by the other

43
Q

Can detriment be good consideration?

A

According to OUP

BUT THIS CONFLICTS SO IDK ABOUT THIS LOL Combe - on divorce husband promised ex wife an allowance of £100 a year but did not make any agreed payments - wife attempted to use PE as a cause of action as she had relied on it = CoA held no consideration given by wife so could not succeed on action

44
Q

What is the difference between executory consideration and executed consideration?

A

Executory consideration: Parties promise one another to perform something in the future afrter contract formed (e.g. deliver goods to be paid for on delivery)

Executed consideration: At time of formation of the contract, consideration already performed (e.g. unilateral contract formed when acceptance occurs)

Executory consideration means parties can both agree to provide something, and still fulfil element of consideration for the formation of a contract

45
Q

What are the 4 rules of consideration?

Think: time, move, adequacy and value

Subject to exceptions!

A

Must not be past - cannot use act/forbearance which has taken place prior to promise to pay

Must move from promisee - a party who has not provided consideration may not bring action to enforce contract (consideration cannot come from third party if promisee wants to enforce)

Need not be adequate - will not interfere with bargain (do not need to be of equal value)

Must be sufficient - must have some value in the eyes of the law (no matter how small)

For sufficiency of consideration - Nestle: chocolate wrappers were good consideration despite being no value to Nestle in exchange for gramophone records and money

46
Q

What is the exception for past consideration?

Past consideration example - Eastwood - Eastwood brought up a girl but this was not good consideration for a contract in which he was promised to have his debt paid off in the present as it was in the past

A

Where prior act/service was provided by promisee at promisor’s request and it was always understood that payment would be made for it

But likely that contract had already formed!

47
Q

What are the 3 requirements for the past consideration exception?

A
  1. Act must have been done at promisor’s request
  2. Parties must have understood act was to be rewarded by payment/benefit (expressly or impliedly)
  3. Payment/benefits must have been legally enforceable had it been promised in advance

E.g. taking a car to the garage, leaving it for repairs, and ultimate price to be decided after completion of repairs

48
Q

What does it mean that consideration must move from the promisee?

A

A party who has not provided consideration cannot bring action to enforce contract

Tweddle - 2 fathers of couple who were about to get married agreed that father of bride paid £200 and father of groom £100 to. bridegroom - groom sought to enforce father-in-law’s promise but held that he could not as no consideration provided (had been provided by fathers)

49
Q

Can an existing contract be good consideration?

A

Generally, no.
But if party exceeds existing obligations or provides a practical benefit then it can be

Williams v Roffey - carpenter got into financial difficutly after contracting to build block of flats, needed additional money otherwise could not complete work, meaning the contractors would have been liable for substantial penalties to main contractors - contractors offered additional sum per flat and then did not stick to promise - avoidance of need to find alternative contractor to do work was held to be a practical benefit, so carpenters had provided good consideration

50
Q

Can an existing public duty be good consideration?

A

Carrying out a public duty imposed by law will not amount to good consideration, but going beyond it will

England - Police officer providing information to private individual went beyond their public duty of preventing crime

51
Q

Can an existing contract with third party be good consideration?

Where A promises to do X for B, then promises to do X for C too

A

Yes - party here is putting itself at risk of double liability :o

52
Q

In what 2 situations can part-payment of debt be good consideration?

Where debtor pays part of debt in return for release from remainder of liability (offering to do something already obliged to do)

A

Not good consideration even if creditor agrees to release from liability!
Unless:

  • Introducing new element (e.g. providing different thing instead of money, paying at different time); or
  • Payment of a lesser sum by a third party (creditor accepts payment by TP of lesser sum; cannot sue debtor for difference)

Can also involve practical benefit

53
Q

What is the doctrine of promissory estoppel?

A

A defence where a party relies on a promise; a promisor cannot go back on a promise where the promisee has relied on it

High Trees - tenant could rely on PE to prevent landlord going back on promise to accept reduced rent during war years when flats not fully let

54
Q

What are the parameters of promissory estoppel:

  • What does it not act as?
  • What must the promise be?
  • What must happen to the position in reliance of promise?
  • Will deteriment be necessary?

4 conditions

A
  • Acts as a shield not a sword (does not give right to sue)
  • Clear and unequivocal promise that strict legal rights won’t be enforced
  • A change of position in reliance of promise (promisee has made a change in position in reliance)
  • Inequitable to go back on it (if detrimental = more likely to make it inequitable!)

Detriment not required

55
Q

What will not amount to a ‘clear and unequivocal promise’?

A

A gratuitous privilege given to promisee - promise must be intended to affect legal relations

56
Q

Can promissory estoppel still operate as a defence where the D knowingly underpays and this is accepted?

D&C Builders - Ds knew builders under financial difficulty and offered a cheque of £300 in full settlement of £482 debt, which was accepted by the builders, but they later sued for the balance and D sought to rely on promissory estoppel…

A

No - those who seek equity must do equity

57
Q

How can a promisor resume their legal rights in a case of promissory estoppel?

2 scenarios

A
  1. Giving reasonable notice or
  2. Waiting until the period of PE to end (e.g. end of reduced payments for set month)

Suspends rights, does not extinguish

58
Q

Will promissory estoppel ever extinguish legal rights?

And not just suspend

A

Yes - past rights e.g. rent for previous quarters in High Trees

59
Q

What is the test for an intention to create legal relations?

A

Objective; determined by what actions of parties in circumstances suggest

60
Q

How do commercial and social/domestic agreements differ re intention to create?

A

Commercial = presumption that parties (B2B/B2C) intend to be bound (rebutted through clear words)

Social/domestic = presumption there was no intention (rebutted through circumstances e.g. separation)

61
Q

What is the presumption on intention where an agreement is made by family members living in amity?

Amity = a good relationship

A

Presumption against intention

62
Q

Will ambiguous wording rebut the presumption that commercial parties intended agreements to be binding?

A

No - clear words must be used

63
Q

Do advertisements present an intention to be bound?

A

Carbolic - assurance of deposit money was demonstration of intention

Esso Petroleum - business context, commercial advantage, trivial value, and likelihood of legal remedies were all considered as factors

64
Q

What inference does the expression ‘subject to contract’ create?

A

An inference that parties do not intend to be bound until formal execution of contract - so an agreement ‘subject to contract’ is not binding

In a sale of land, it is usual to express tentative preliminary agreement to be ‘subject to contract’, so as to give the parties an opportunity to reflect/seek legal or other advice before entering a binding contra

65
Q

Who has capacity to enter into a contract?

A

Those over 18 with sound mind and not suffering from a factor ruling out capacity

66
Q

If someone contracted with a minor, and was not aware that the minor has lied about their age, will they generally be bound by a contract they enter with them?

A

No

67
Q

What are the exceptions for minors re capacity?

I.e. when both parties bound by contract

A
  1. Bound by contract to supply necessaries to them if contract is for minor’s benefit
  2. Contracts of employment, apprenticeships or education if it is for benefit of minor
68
Q

What is a ‘necessary’?

A

A good suitable to the condition in life of the minor or other person concerned and to their actual requirements at time of sale and delivery

Nash - wasitcoats supplied to minor undergrad at Cambridge were suitable but not necessary as he already had sufficient clothing = contract not enforceable

69
Q

Must a minor pay the actual cost of the ‘necessaries’ supplied?

A

No - need to pay a reasonable price

70
Q

Will a young footballer’s contract with a club be beneficial and thus enforceable?

Aylesbury Football Club

A

Not if they do not receive extra training/experience, terms are onerous, wages depended on will of employer, and/or freedom is restricted to pursue football career

71
Q

Can someone party to a contract with a minor enforce it? Vice versa?

A

Unless one of the exceptions applies…

  • Cannot enforce contract against minor
  • Minor can enforce contract against other party

Once minor reaches 18, contract binding on them

72
Q

When does someone lack capacity under MCA?

A

If they are unable to make a decision for themselves in relation to matter at time contract made (whether impairment is permanent or temporary)

NB capacity not something someone has for all purposes e.g. someone with brain injury might have capacity to decide where to live but not to invest a large sum of money

73
Q

What is the effect of entering into a contract with a person lacking capacity? Binding or voidable?

A

Contract is binding unless person claiming incapacity can establish they did not understand what they were doing and other party knew this (contract voidable if so)

74
Q

What is the exception for persons without capacity? What will they remain liable for?

A

To pay a reasonable price for ‘necessaries’; goods or services suitable to a person’s condition of life and to his actual requirements at time goods/services supplied