Contract Flashcards
What 3 things are required to form a binding contract?
Offer & acceptance
ICLR
Consideration
What’s the difference between a bilateral and unilateral contract?
Bilateral: both parties assume an obligation to each other
Unilateral: one party makes an offer in terms which call for an act to be performed by one or more other parties
What are the requirements for a valid offer?
- Clear & certain
- Display an intention to be bound (unequivocal acceptance)
What is an invitation to treat and 5 examples of it?
The 1st step in negotiations that can’t be accepted to form a binding contract
1. Ads (not where there is a unilateral offer)
2. Displays of goods
3. Invitation to tender
4. Auctions
5. Websites
When is agreement made for self-service shops?
Offeror = customer
Offeree = storekeeper
Agreement made when scanned through
When will an invitation to tender NOT be treated as an invitation to treat?
Where the ITT expressly contains an undertaking to accept the highest or lowest bid
It’s a form of unilateral contract
When would there be a binding contractual obligation to consider tenders?
Tender solicitor from specified parties known to them; absolute deadline for submission; requestor laid down absolute/non-negotiable conditions for submission
What happens with a ‘without reserve’ auction where the auctioneer refuses to sell to the highest bidder?
Could be sued for breach of unilateral contract: promise auction is without reserve
Highest bona fide bidder entitled to damages but NOT the goods (as this was dictated by a bilateral contract)
How can an offer come to an end?
- Rejection - counter-offer seen as a rejection
- Lapse - not in time prescribed or not within a reasonable time
- Revocation - any time before acceptance upon actual notice of it reaching the offeree (if by post, moment received by offeree)
For unilateral contracts, when can revocation take place?
Prior to completion of completed act
For ones made to the whole world, it’s effective where offeror takes reasonable steps to bring revocation to attention of all who may have read it
Where it’s been partly performed & they are willing/able to complete, revocation not effective
What are the requirements for valid acceptance?
- Only offeree can accept
- Acceptance is unqualified - mirror image
- Valid mode (if mode prescribed)
- Communicated to offeror - effective from time communicated: for post, time it was properly posted; for instantaneous means, when received by offeror
When does the postal rule apply?
Where acceptance delayed/lost in post
Does Not Apply: if not contemplated post would be used; incorrectly addressed; letters revoking offers; disapplied by offeror
If acceptance was not received and the offeree was at fault, what is the consequence? And if offeror at fault? And if nobody at fault?
Offeree: no contract
Offeror: contract prevails
Nobody: no contract
What is consideration and its 2 types?
An exchange between the parties
1. Executory: parties make promises to each other to perform something in the future
2. Executed: at start of contract, consideration has already been performed
What 7 rules/principles are there on consideration?
- Must not be past
- Must move from promise
- Need not be adequate
- Must be sufficient (must have some value)
- A pre-existing public duty
- A pre-existing contractual obligation owed to promisor
- A pre-existing contractual obligation owed to a 3rd party
What is the rule of ‘consideration must not be past’ and what is the exception?
If act/forbearance took prior to promise, can’t be exchange for that promise
Exception: where some prior act was provided by promisee at promisor’s request & always understand they’d be paid
(i) Act done at promisor’s request
(ii) Parties understood that the act was to be rewarded by some benefit
(iii) Benefit must have been legally enforceable had it been promised in advance
What is the principle of a ‘pre-existing contractual obligation owed to promisor’ in relation to consideration?
General Rule: when party promises additional payment for existing contractual obligations, not good consideration
Exception: factual consideration - nothing new promised but party still getting sth out of reshaped deal
What are the requirements for factual consideration?
- Entered into contract
- Before A has completed obligations, B doubts where A will complete his own
- B promises A extra payment so A performs on time
- B obtains in practice a benefit, or obviates a disbenefit
- B’s promise not due to economic duress or fraud
What is a ‘pre-existing contractual obligation to a third party’?
Performance will be sufficient consideration but party offering to do this is risking double liability
Is a debtor promising to pay part of a debt in return for release of remainder of liability good consideration?
No
Exceptions: introducing new element into payment; payment of a lesser sum by a 3rd party; practical benefit argument
What is promissory estoppel?
Protecting a party’s reliance on a non-bargain promise, commonly used for debts
(i) Acts as a shield, not a sword
(ii) Clear, unequivocal promise that strict legal rights won’t be fully enforceable
(iii) Change of position in reliance on the promise (need not show detriment)
(iv) Inequitable to allow promisor to go back on the promise
What is ICLR?
An intention to enter into a contract with legal ramifcations
When are assumptions as to ICLR made?
Commercial: there’s intention
Domestic: no intention
Both can be rebutted
What does the term ‘subject to contract’ mean?
Not binding until formal execution