Business Law Chapter 15
Types of Consideration (4)
1. A benefit to the promisee Ex. A promise to stay in a job until the project is complete 2. A detriment to the promisor Ex. Promising your coach you won't ride your motorcycle until season is over 3. A promise to do something Ex. Promise to cook dinner for roommate for next 6 months 4. Promise to refrain from doing something Ex. Promise to stop going out during exam week
Accord and Satisfaction (3 parts)
1. Debt is unliquidated 2. Creditor agrees to accept as full payment less than it claims is owed 3. Debtor pays the amount they agreed on
Promissory Estoppel Occurs When (3)
1. One party makes a promise and either knows or should know that the other party will reasonably act on it 2. The other party does reasonably rely on the promise 3. The only way to avoid injustice is to enforce the promise
Exceptions to the Rule For Consideration (2)
1. Promissory Estoppel 2. Contract Under Seal
Exceptions for Preexisting Duty (2)
1. Unforeseen circumstances: cause a party to make a promise regarding an unfinished project, that promise is valid consideration 2. Additional Work: if a party to a contract to do more work, the promise to do it is valid consideration
Preexisting Duty (2 parts)
A promise to do something that you're already obligated to do isn't valid consideration 1. Performance of a duty you are obligated to do under the law 2. Performance of an existing contractual duty
Lack of Consideration
Bilateral: Court will enforce a party's promise only if the other party promised some consideration in exchange Unilateral: one party's consideration is the promise and the other party's consideration is the act
Adequacy of Consideration
Court doesn't care if you made a good bargain If the court believes fraud or undue influence occurred, the court may look at adequacy of consideration
Contract under Seal
Largely an obsolete legal issue Only 10 states allow a contract without consideration to be enforced it it's under seal
Partial Payment of a Debt
May or may not be valid consideration, depending on if the debt is liquidated or unliquidated
Past Consideration
Not valid consideration There must be a bargained for exchange Promise can't be based on consideration already provided in the past, before the promise was made
Exception to Past Consideration
Promises based on past consideration may be enforceable to the extent to prevent injustice In some cases, if the past consideration was given with expectation of future payment, the court may enforce the promise
Exception to Liquidated Debt
When the debtor offers different performance
Conditional Payment
any payment that is less than the full balance but is marked "paid in full"
Exception to Accord and Satisfaction
concerning credit card companies paid in full clauses
Satisfaction
debtor's payment of the reduced amount
Reliance Damages
money spent in reliance on a promise
Illusory Promise
not a promise at all (not consideration) Not enforceable - only the illusion of a contract
Promissory Estoppel
one exception to the rule requiring consideration.
Unliquidated Debt
parties either disagree about whether money is owed, or dispute the amount Can settle for less than the full amount if they enter into an accord and satisfaction
Accord
the new agreement to pay less than the creditor claims is owed
Liquidated Debt
there is no dispute that money is owed or how much
Consideration
what a person will receive in return for performing a contract obligation Required in every contract Can be anything as long as it's the product of a bargained-for-exchange Often but not always money
Lack of mutuality
where only one side is bound to perform