Consideration (Business Law)
1.Legal Sufficiency 2. Bargain for exchange
2 basic elements of consideration are?
public duty
A ___________ such as those imposed by tort or criminal law is neither a legal detriment nor a legal benefit and does not arise out of contract.
promise to perform a voidable obligation
A new __________ that has not been previously avoided is enforceable, i.e., a promise to pay an antecedent debt by a minor who has attained the age of majority
enforceable by various statutes
Certain gratuitous promises are made __________ particularly the UCC.
Consideration
It is one element that separates contractual promises from non- contractual promises
3 years
The general statute of limitations in Mississippi is
pre-existing legal duty
The law does not regard the performance of, or the promise to perform, of a____________, public or private, as either a legal detriment or a legal benefit.
pre-existing contractual duty
The performance of ___________ or obligation is not consideration. The doing of what one is already legally bound to do is neither a detriment to the promisor nor a benefit to the promisee.
mutuality of obligation
The relationship under a bilateral contract is referred to as a
promissory estoppel
This doctrine prohibits a party from denying his or her promise when the promisee takes action or forbearance to his detriment reasonably based upon the promise.
modification of a pre-existing contract
Under common law a___________must be supported by mutual consideration to be enforceable. Under the UCC, a contract can be modified without new consideration, however, the modification is subject to good faith.
pe-existing moral obiligation
Under common law, a promise made to satisfy a _________ is generally unenforceable for lack of consideration.
Consideration
exchanged for a promise may be an act, a forbearance to act, or a promise to do either of these.
exclusive dealing contract
grants an exclusive right to a distributor, franchisee or licensee by a manufacturer of the sole right to sell goods in a defined market.
Illusory Promises
impose no obligation whatsoever on the promisor. His or her performance is entirely optional. It is a statement that is in the form of a promise but imposes no obligation upon the maker of the statement, and it is not consideration for a return promise.
a promise to pay a debt barred by the statute of limitations
is a new promise by the debtor to pay the debt renews the running of the statute for a second statutory period. Every state has statutes of limitation which provide that legal actions must be initiated within a prescribed period of time after the claim arose.
conditional promise
is a promise, the performance of which depends upon the happening or non-happening of a stated event or condition.
requirements contract
is a purchaser's agreement to buy from a particular seller all of the materials of a particular kind that he or she needs.
output contract
is a seller's agreement to sell all of his or her production to a single buyer. It provides a seller with an assured market for their product.
unliquidated debt
is an obligation disputed as to either its existence or its amount. The settlement or discharge of an unliquidated or disputed debt by payment of a lesser sum of money is legally sufficient consideration.
liquidated debt
is an obligation, the existence or amount of which is not disputed. Settlement or discharge of a liquidated or undisputed debt by payment of a lesser sum of money does not constitute legally sufficient consideration
Consideration
is defined as the inducement to enter into a contract
Past consideration
is not consideration. Consideration to support a promise may be given to a person other than the promisor (third- party) if the promisor bargains for that exchange.
Legal Benefit
is obtaining by the promisor something to which he or she had no prior legal right to obtain
Legal detriment
is the doing of an act the promisee is not legally obligated to do or not doing an act that the promisee has a legal right to do.
Consideration
is the primary basis for enforcing promises in our legal system.
unilateral contract
is where a promise is exchanged for a completed act or a forbearance to act.
bilateral contract
is where the parties exchange promises, making each party a promisor and promisee.
Legal Sufficiency
means that the consideration exchanged must consist of either a legal benefit to the promisor or a legal detriment to the promisee.
firm offers
offers signed by a merchant to keep open an offer to buy or sell for a stated period of time, not to exceed 3 months, or if no time is stated, for a reasonable time.
substituted contract
results when the parties mutually agree to rescind their original contract and to enter into a new one. This situation involves separate contracts - the original contract, the agreement of rescission, and the new contract. Each of these separate agreements is supported by consideration.
written renunciations
waivers by the aggrieved party