GE 400 Exam 2
warranty of title
"i own the goods and can pass the title free and clear"
express contract
"will you cut my grass for ten dollars?"
compensatory damages
1) put you in position you would have been in had they not breached 2) compensate for actual losses
UCC
Uniform Commercial Code-uniform system for sale of goods (NOT real-estate or services) across state boundaries. codified in all 50 states. very technical.
non-compete agreement
a clause under which an employee agrees not to enter into or start a similar profession or trade in competition against employer
public policy and contracts
a contract with subject matter that is harmful to society will not be enforced
counteroffers
a simultaneous rejection of the previous offer and the making of a new offer.
bilateral contract
a typical contract, between two sides
capacity to contract
ability for a party to enter into the contract - must be a legal entity, must not be legally incompetent
ways to terminate an offer
acceptance, revocation/withdrawal of offer, rejection, counteroffer, lapse of party, passage of time, material change in bargain
"accord and satisfaction"
agreement to accept substitute performance - alternate consideration. "instead of 10 dollars, i'll walk your dog for a week"
the corporate veil
agreement with a corporation is only binding on the corporation not the corporation's agent.
legally binding contract
an agreement, between at least two parties, enforced by a court
revocation
an offeror can revoke an offer at any time for any reason or no reason except when an offeree has paid to keep an offer open
implied warranty
arise for all product sales unless they are specifically disclaimed (UCC)
writ of execution
authorize sheriff to seize and sell off property
legally prevented from entering into agreement
bankrupt entities, under court order
restatement definition of offer
bargain must be clear - meeting of minds, understanding must be reasonable
objective reasonableness
based on custom, practice, communications, etc. created in the mind of the perceiver
what is much of contract law based on?
based on reasonableness. enforce what the parties reasonably agree to. honor expectations of parties, honor practice in industry.
ultra vires
beyond the powers. corporations used to be organized for very specific purposes and any agreement beyond those purposes could not be enforced.
meeting of the minds
both sides substantially understood all of the terms of the contract to mean the same thing
if goods are not conforming
buyer can reject entire shipment, accept some conforming goods, but deny remaining, and accept all goods, but sue for cost of non-conformance
solicitation of an offer
can't be accepted, ex: i would like to sell my car for $2k.
damages from intentional torts
compensatory or punitive may be dischargeable in bankruptcy or non-collectable due to homestead, pension, or trust
novation
completely replace one party with another
mutual mistake
contract is typically voidable by either party
liquidated damages
contract provisions spell out how much the damages would be in situations where it would be difficult to prove "for each day late, pay $1k)
what happens with a company once it enters bankruptcy?
court can modify or terminate a contract and debt may be discharged
injunctions
court orders them to do/not do something
specific performance
court orders them to go through with the deal, typically only for unique consideration
damages
court orders them to pay you money
piercing corporate veil
decision arises when corporation is not being treated like a separate legal entity.
when is performance excused?
destruction of essential element, unexpected hardship, death, frustration of purpose (contract no longer makes sense), prevention of performance by other side, waiver by other side
historic contract law
developed by the states in the state court system. interpretation arose from what local community found to be reasonable and repeatedly enforced
disclaimer
disclaim warranties. ex) "as is" no implied or express warranties
performance
doing what you have promised to do. fail to perform is breach
statute of repose
even if not discovered, you can't sue after X years
misrepresentation
false statement of fact transmitted from the seller to the buyer that induces the buyer to buy. an honest mistake. makes contract voidable by party misrepresented-to
purchase order
from buyer to seller. buyer: i want these goods under my terms. PO usually wins
invoice
from seller to buyer. seller: goods are provided under my terms.
case law
general practice over decades created a fairly uniform sample set of decisions so that you could generally predict what a court would enforce - statistical norms based on previous practice
situations lacking consideration
gifts, prior obligation
unenforceable
good parties, offer, and acceptance, but something prevents enforcement
merchantability
goods are of fair quality, fit for ordinary purposes, substantially uniform in quality, packaged and labeled, and conform to their labels
warranty
guarantee that is legally enforceable against the party making it
UCC counteroffers
if change in terms is modest, then it will likely be treated as acceptance
fitness for a particular purpose
if i tell you what i want, you have to sell me the right product
statute of frauds
if it's a big deal, get a record of it or the court is not going to enforce it when there is a dispute. big deal - anything involving land/real estate, can't be performed in a year, sale in excess of $500, involves marriage, agreeing to take on someone else's debt
"blue pencil"
if part of agreement is unenforceable, court may modify the remainder of agreement
assault
immediate apprehension of offensive contact
duress
improper pressure placed on the other party that deprives them of their free will
legally incompetent
infants (younger than 18), non compos mentis (insane, drunk)
intent to offer
intent is reviewed objectively rather than subjectively
contempt of court
jail them up to 6 months
Restatement of the Law of Contracts
lawyers from many states tried to agree on what was "reasonable" nationwide. non-binding, but implemented by many states. sometimes only partially implemented. very high-level, definitional law
intentional torts
liability arises from an intentional act by a tortfeasor - one who commits the tort
contracts with non-compete
most likely to be enforceable if limited in geographic scope, limited in time, higher up in employee chain
restatement counteroffers
must have complete agreement and any proposal for change in terms cancels original offer
are contracts always enforced in court?
no
does a contract have to be written on paper? does a contract need to say 'contract' at the top?
no
void (ab initio)
no good from the beginning (ex: contract to commit an illegal act)
voidable/non-binding contract
no meeting of minds, when agreement is not voluntary, voidable at option of aggrieved party only
extended warranty
offered by a seller to give buyer more confidence in the goods to induce purchase
method of acceptance
offeror can set method of acceptance. silence generally not sufficient unless face to face or under UCC
lapse of party/passage of time
offeror gives offer but dies before acceptance - no contract offeror gives offer but is insane - no contract offeror offers to pay for lawn cutting in June and you don't accept until december - no contract
material change in bargain
offeror offers to pay for lawn cutting but then all the grass disappears before acceptance - no contract. contract if grass disappears after acceptance.
mailbox rule
once contract placed in mailbox, irrevocable
duty to mitigate
once you become aware of damage happening to you, you must take reasonable steps to minimize your damages.
voidable
one or both of the parties may avoid the contract (ex - contract with minor)
undue influence
one party improperly exploits a position of power over another.
unilateral contract
one side sets all the terms (ex: cell phone company)
valid contract
one that is enforced by the courts
assignment
partly replace one party. someone other than an original party now has a duty or receives benefit
several liability
party 1 is only responsible for party 1.
joint liability
party 1 is responsible for party 2 and vice versa
attachment/lien
property can't be sold without paying Lien
offeror
proposes a contract
unilateral mistake
reasonable mistake - likely not bound by contract
offeree
receives offer and can decline, counter offer, or accept
false imprisonment
restraint of a person in a bounded area without justification or consent no time limit and can be any bounded area
fraud
seller makes a known to be false statement of fact to buyer to get them to buy. harder to prove than misrepresentation.
consideration
something of value, money goods and services, agreement to do or not to do something. consideration must be exchanged for a contract to be enforceable. must have value, must be legal, must be possible at the time agreement is made, must be present or future.
statute of frauds exceptions
something takes longer than expected, merchant confirmation if not disputed in 10 days, admission by other side
"time is of the essence"
takes away reasonableness factor. get it done by this day or breach
conforming goods
the UCC requires that a seller tender goods to a buyer by placing conforming goods at the buyer's disposal
special/consequential damages
their failure cost you more than just contract
punitive damages
they are evil and should be punished
statue of limitations
they know you breached, but don't sue for 10 years - governed by state law
express warranty
things that one party can't easily identify but wants to be essential to the agreement. often associated with liquidated damages
garnishment
third party holding their assets must give them directly to you
battery
unwanted touching
co-signer
usually jointly liable with signer.
quasi contract/quantum meruit
when a party to the contract is no more, so no contract can be created. recovery is in quantum meruit - you will get as much as you deserve
ratification
when a voidable contract becomes no longer voidable. can be ratified through behavior. ex: person is insane but then recovers
option
when an offeree has paid to keep an offer open. a contract to make an offer to form another contract unrevocable for a time.
ownership
when ownership of goods passes from one party to another, must transfer "title"
torts
wrongs. breach of a duty that society says that you owe to another. civil lawsuit = preponderance of the evidence designed to compensate the victim for the bad acts of another
implied contract
you've been asked to cut grass for several weeks for $10 each time, then you show up without being asked. you will be paid $10
intent
your intent typically does not matter - if it happens, you are typically liable