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Anderson 19th Ed. 2005

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Chapter 14 CONTRACTS: CAPACITY AND GENUINE ASSENT Elements of a Contract Elements of a contract: an agreement between competent parties based on genuine assent of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anderson 19th Ed. 2005


1
Chapter 14CONTRACTS CAPACITY AND GENUINE ASSENT
2
Elements of a Contract
  • Elements of a contract
  • an agreement
  • between competent parties
  • based on genuine assent of the parties
  • supported by consideration
  • made for a lawful objective
  • in the form required by law if any

3
Contractual Capacity
  • An agreement that otherwise appears to be a
    contract may not be binding because one of the
    parties lacks contractual capacity.
  • In such a case, the contract is ordinarily
    voidable at the election of that party who lacks
    contractual capacity. In some cases, the contract
    is void.
  • Status Incapacity.
  • Factual Incapacity.

4
Contractual Capacity
  • Contractual incapacity is the inability, for
    mental or physical reasons, to understand that a
    contract is being made and to understand its
    general terms and nature.
  • Incapacity may be due to
  • being a minor.
  • Insanity.
  • Intoxication.

5
Minors
  • Minors can avoid most contracts.
  • Must be within reasonable time.
  • Minor must return what had been received from the
    other party if the minor still has it.
  • Minor must pay the reasonable value of a
    necessary.
  • Restitution by Minor after Avoidance.
  • Original Consideration Intact.
  • Original Consideration Damaged/Destroyed.

6
Minors
  • Recovery of Property.
  • Contracts for Necessaries.
  • Ratification of Minors Voidable Contract.
  • No Special Form of Ratification.
  • Reasonable time after Emancipation.
  • Contracts The Minors Cannot Avoid.
  • Educational loans, medical care, court-approved,
    bank accounts, insurance policies.

7
Mentally Incompetent Persons
  • The contract of an MI person is voidable to much
    the same extent as the contract of a minor.
  • An important distinction is that if a guardian
    has been appointed for the MI person, a contract
    made by the insane person is void (not merely
    voidable).

8
Intoxicated Persons
  • An intoxicated person lacks contractual capacity
    to make a contract if the intoxication is such
    that the person does not understand that a
    contract is being made.

9
Unilateral Mistake
  • Contracts may be avoided due to mistake by one or
    both of the parties.
  • Unilateral Mistake.
  • Mistake unknown to the other party usually does
    not affect the binding character of the
    agreement.
  • A mistake known to the other contracting party
    makes the contract avoidable by the victim of the
    mistake.

10
Mutual Mistake
  • Mutual Mistake When both parties are mistaken
    about a basic, material fact of the contract, the
    adversely affected party may avoid the contract.
  • Reformation for Mistake in Transcription or
    Printing of the Contract.

11
Deception
  • Innocent misrepresentation there is a trend to
    allow it as a ground for avoiding the contract.
  • Fraud When concealment goes beyond silence and
    consists of actively hiding the truth, the
    conduct is fraud rather than nondisclosure.
  • Statements of Opinion are not fraud.
  • Contract is voidable by the innocent person.

12
Deception
  • Nondisclosure.
  • General Rule There is no legal duty to volunteer
    information to the other party.
  • Exceptions
  • Serious Defect that could not be discovered.
  • Confidential Relationship.
  • Active Concealment.

13
Pressure
  • The free will of a person, essential to the
    voluntary character of a contract, is lacking if
    the agreement is obtained by pressure. Contract
    is voidable.
  • Undue influence where the beneficiary of the
    contract is in a position of extreme power over
    the maker of the contract.
  • Duress
  • Physical Duress Threat of physical force that
    would cause serious personal injury or damage to
    property.
  • Economic Duress against free will.

14
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