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Voluntary

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Title: Voluntary


1
CHAPTER 13
  • Voluntary
  • Consent

2
Introduction
  • An agreement must be voluntary to be enforceable
  • Remedy
  • Voidable (Rescind or Disaffirm)
  • Unless ratify

3
Lack of Voluntary Consent
  • Knowing Misrepresentation
  • of a material fact
  • based on the circumstances
  • fact, not opinion, speculation or puffing
  • Morehouse v. Behlman-Pontiac, p. 222
  • The court finds that a used car salesmans
    representations about the condition of a minivan
    were material misrepresentations of fact. The
    court takes the modern approach of construing the
    statements in favor of the party with less
    knowledge. Bogosian was a veteran used-car
    salesman with more than forty-two years
    experience.

4
Lack of Voluntary Consent
  • Knowing Misrepresentation
  • of a material fact
  • Question 6 at end of chapter
  • Sperau v. Ford Motor Co.
  • An African-American businessman who was recruited
    by Ford to open a dealership is successful in his
    claim that race-based figures regarding return on
    investment and losses, which were not revealed by
    Ford, were material facts.
  • Sperau sued for fraudulent misrepresentation in
    tort. However, the issues discussed would be the
    same whether in tort or contract. The court
    construes the statements in favor of the party
    with less knowledge.

5
Lack of Voluntary Consent
  • Knowing Misrepresentation
  • justifiably relied on
  • after reasonable investigation
  • Griesi v. Atlantic General Hospital, p.223
  • The court finds that an applicant for a job
    justifiably relied on the statement of the acting
    CEO that he had been hired.
  • Griesi is not trying to get out of a contract due
    to misrepresentation (the usual case). He is
    suing for negligent misrepresentation. However,
    the issue of justifiable reliance is the same.
    Note that the fact that the representations were
    made by the head of the institution was important
    to the courts decision regarding whether the
    reliance was justifiable. If the CEO cant be
    relied on, who can? Since Griesi was being hired
    as an employee at will, he could not sue for the
    lack of a job, per se.

6
Lack of Voluntary Consent
  • Knowing Misrepresentation
  • to the detriment of the party relying (i.e.
    actual injury)
  • not an honest mistake

7
Fraud
  • Intentional Misrepresentation
  • Knowingly Made
  • Or should have known
  • Or Reckless
  • With Intent to Deceive- Scienter
  • Courts often infer
  • May include intent to conceal material fact(s)

8
Fraud
  • By Silence
  • Common law Caveat Emptor
  • Modified by disclosure laws
  • Columbia v. Cottey, p.226
  • The court finds that the hospitals failure to
    disclose its discretion to rescind the Top Hat
    Plan is sufficient to find that the hospital
    misrepresented the contract by silence. Cottey
    sued for fraudulent misrepresentation in tort.
    However, the issues discussed would be the same
    whether in tort or contract. Including Cotteys
    other claims, he was awarded close to 500,000.
    Note that the hospital argued that Cottey
    ratified the contract by continuing to perform
    his duties even after he learned of the recission
    of the plan. However, the court looked to the
    intent of the parties and held that acts done in
    affirmance of the contract can amount to a waiver
    of the fraud only where they are done with full
    knowledge of the fraud and of all material facts,
    and with the intention, clearly manifested, of
    abiding by the contract and waiving all right to
    recover for the deception. Acts which, although
    in affirmance of the contract, do not indicate
    any intention to waive the fraud, cannot be held
    to operate as a waiver. Cottey continued to
    complain about the rescission of the plan. He did
    not ratify the fraud or waive his right to
    complain about it.

9
Fraud
  • By Silence
  • Question 5 at end of chapter
  • Stambovsky v. Ackley
  • The court, in a humorous opinion, finds that
    failure to disclose that a house is haunted when
    the seller has advertised that fact in the past,
    is sufficient for rescission.
  • The court found that, as a matter of law, the
    house was haunted. Courts normally require the
    disclosure of material facts. The court said,
    no divination is required to conclude that it is
    defendants promotional efforts in publicizing
    her close encounters with these spirits which
    fostered the homes reputation in the community.
    Ackley clearly made money on his ghosts. The
    court stresses that buyers have a duty to inspect
    for usual problems. Defendant inserted an as
    is clause in the contract, but the court found
    that it applied only to tangible or physical
    matters and not to paranormal phenomena. The
    dissent in the case felt that if caveat emptor
    was to be discarded, it ought to be for a reason
    more substantive than a poltergeist.

10
Fraud
  • Hord v. Environmental Research Institute of
    Michigan, p.225
  • An employee who is shown a misleading financial
    statement in order to induce him to work for the
    company is allowed to sue for fraud.
  • Hord sued both for fraudulent misrepresentation
    and silent fraud (the failure to disclose
    information). The jury awarded him 175,000
    without indicating which theory it relied on.
  • Do you think Hord had a duty to ask for the
    latest financial information if he considered it
    crucial to his decision about whether to take the
    job?
  • Would it matter to the outcome if the company
    believed that the reversal in its fortunes was
    only temporary?

11
Fraud
  • In Execution - involves misstatements about the
    content or legal effect of something, usually in
    a preprinted contract.
  • Rely without reading no claim for fraud
  • Unless prevented or discouraged from reading or
  • special trust relationship
  • Effect prevents creation of a contract

12
Fraud
  • Remedy
  • Rescind
  • Affirm and sue in tort for deceit

13
Duress/Undue Influence
  • Involves interference with ability to resist
    entering into an agreement
  • At time of contract
  • Duress Wrongful Threat (or Force)
  • Of physical harm(common law)
  • Of disastrous economic harm
  • Cross Talk Productions, Inc. v. Jacobson, p. 228
  • Employees who reveal extortion payments they felt
    economically compelled to make are allowed to sue
    for economic distress when their contract is
    cancelled.
  • The court here viewed the facts with a view to
    doing substantial justice between the parties.
  • Defendant demurred to plaintiffs claims of
    economic duress, and intentional and negligent
    infliction of emotional distress because of the
    unclean hands defense, and was successful at
    the trial level. The appeals court finds that the
    defendant instigated the misconduct and that the
    moral blame attributable to him far outweighs any
    attributable to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs did not
    obtain the contract through bribery and they did
    not admit to commercial bribery since they had no
    intent to injure or defraud CBS.

14
Duress/Undue Influence
  • Economic Duress
  • Question 7 at end of chapter
  • No. Economic duress occurs when, due to a
    wrongful act, a party involuntarily accepts the
    terms of an agreement because the circumstances
    permit no other reasonable alternative. A person
    may not have a reasonable alternative when a
    delay caused by pursuing a legal remedy would
    cause immediate or irreparable serious loss or
    financial ruin. Defendants offering plaintiff a
    choice of resigning or being fired did not rise
    to such a level as to deprive Blubaugh of the
    exercise of free will. Blubaugh could have
    allowed defendant to fire him and then sought
    relief from the courts, or resigned and taken the
    severance pay to which he was entitled without
    signing the release. There is no evidence that
    walking away with 31,382 instead of 35,943
    placed such an economic hardship on him as to
    obliterate his exercise of free will. There is no
    evidence he would face immediate financial ruin
    if he pursued a remedy in court instead of
    signing the agreement. The fact that he was upset
    is insufficient to invalidate the agreement
    emotional distress is not equivalent to economic
    duress. The fact that he didnt negotiate the
    agreement or seek counsel also does not amount to
    duress. What we apparently have here is someone
    who was initially satisfied with the settlement
    but who, upon subsequent reflection, concluded he
    could have gotten more out of the deal and
    attempted to renege on it. Blubaugh v. Turner,
    842 P.2d 1072 (Sup. Ct. Wyo. 1992).

15
Duress/Undue Influence
  • Involves interference with ability to resist
    entering into an agreement
  • Of criminal prosecution
  • Not of well-found civil suit
  • Undue Influence
  • Based on confidential/special relationship
  • Question 8 at end of chapter.
  • Yes. Wyers was a widow with limited abilities who
    was strongly influenced by a young man who
    offered to help her and care for her. She was
    also on medication at the time of the mortgage
    signing. When United asked her if she understood
    what was happening, Gilreath hit her under the
    table and she nodded yes. He had earlier
    brandished a loaded gun and told her not to give
    him any trouble at the closing or answer any
    questions and to do what she was told. This is
    sufficient for undue influence. United Companies
    Financial Corp. v. Wyers, 518 So.2d 700 (Sup. Ct.
    Ala. 1988).
  • Effect Voidable

16
Mistake
  • One or more parties acted upon a sincere but
    untrue belief about a material existing or past
    fact
  • Mutual a basis for recission by either party
  • Unintentional ambiguous term
  • About subject matter
  • State of Alaska v. Carpenter, p. 169
  • A man who bought land and borrowed money from the
    state in order develop a working farm is not
    allowed to use the doctrine of mistake when all
    attempts at farming failed.
  • Since the government was selling the land and
    making the loan to be used as farmland, is this
    something Carpenter was justified in relying on
    despite the disclaimers?

17
Mistake
  • Mutual a basis for recission by either party
  • Question 9 at end of chapter.
  • No. Judicial relief from a contract on the basis
    of mutual mistake is proper where there was a
    mistake of both parties at the time of contracts
    as to a basic assumption on which the contract
    was made, the mistake had a material effect on
    the performance, and the party seeking relief did
    not bear the risk of the mistake. Where there is
    a conscious uncertainty, there is an assumption
    of the risk that the resolution of the
    uncertainty may be unfavorable. The detailed
    disclaimers in the contracts made Carpenter aware
    that there were uncertainties regarding the
    condition of the land. Although both parties may
    have intended for the land to be developed for
    agricultural purposes, they were uncertain that
    this was possible. Additionally, Carpenter
    contractually bore the risk of that uncertainty.
    He is not excused from his contractual
    obligations. State of Alaska v. Carpenter, 268
    P.2d 1181 (Alaska Sup. Ct. 1994).

18
Mistake
  • Mutual a basis for recission by either party
  • Question 10 at end of chapter
  • Yes. Mutual assent is a prerequisite to the
    creation of a contract. Where both parties share
    a common assumption about a vital fact on which
    they based their bargain, and that assumption is
    false, the transaction may be avoided if the
    mistake caused quite a different exchange of
    values than that contemplated by the parties. The
    parties shared a common presumption that proved
    false. Both considered the property to be
    cluttered with junk stuff and trash.
    Neither party suspected that Mestrovic works
    remained on the premises. The resultant gain to
    the Wilkins and loss to the bank were not
    contemplated by the parties when the bank agreed
    to let the Wilkins clean the premises and keep
    the personal property. There was no agreement for
    the disposition of the art because there was no
    meeting of the minds. Wilkins v. 1st Source Bank,
    548 N.E. 2d 170 (Ct. App. Ind. 1990).

19
Mistake
  • Unilateral not a basis for recission (Though
    courts sometimes grant anyway)
  • Lehrer v. State of Washington, p. 230
  • A psychiatrist who agreed to resign from a
    hospital in return for the removal of personal
    conduct records from his files is not allowed to
    use the doctrine of mistake when the disciplinary
    board continued to pursue complaints levied
    against him.
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