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The Essentials of Contract Law

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Title: The Essentials of Contract Law


1
UNIT 7
  • The Essentials of Contract Law

SUNY CRIMINAL BUSINESS LAW/MUSOLINO
2
Learning Objectives
  1. Explain the three theories of contract law.
  2. Identify the six elements of a contract.
  3. Explain the place of the UCC in contract law.
  4. Distinguish contracts from other agreements
    between different parties.
  5. Explain the concept of privity and contract law.
  6. Explain the nature of valid, void, voidable, and
    unenforceable contracts

3
Learning Objectives
  1. Contrast unilateral and bilateral contractual
    arrangements.
  2. Outline the difference between express and
    implied contracts.
  3. Discuss the difference between quasi-contracts
    and implied-in-fact contracts.
  4. Differentiate between formal and informal
    contracts.
  5. Explain how executory contracts differ from
    executed contracts.

4
Question?
  • What is an agreement between two or more
    competent parties?
  • Deal
  • Bond
  • Treaty
  • Contract

5
The Basics of Contract Law
  • Contract
  • an agreement between two or more competent
    parties, based on mutual promises, to do or
    refrain from doing some particular thing that is
    neither illegal nor impossible
  • results in an obligation or a duty that can be
    enforced in a court of law

6
Question?
  • What is the contracting party who makes a
    promise?
  • Promisee
  • Promisor
  • Obligee
  • Obligor

7
Question?
  • What is the contracting party to whom a party
    owes an obligation?
  • Promisee
  • Promisor
  • Obligee
  • Obligor

8
The Basics of Contract Law
  • Promisor
  • the contracting party who makes a promise
  • Promisee
  • the one to whom the promise is made is the
  • Obligor
  • the party who is obligated to deliver on a
    promise or undertake some act of performance
  • Obligee
  • the contracting party to whom this party owes an
    obligation

9
The Objectives of Contract Law
  • The courts goal in the remedy phase of a
    contract dispute is to place the injured party in
    as good a position as he or she would have been
    had the contract been carried out
  • Mitigation
  • Punitive damages

10
Question?
  • Which theory states that a contract will exist
    once all of the parties with the legal capacity
    to contract have actually accepted all
    obligations and benefits under the contract ?
  • Equal value theory
  • Equity theory
  • Will theory
  • Judgment theory

11
Three Theories of Contract Law
  • The will theory
  • a general principle of law that states that a
    contract will exist once all of the parties with
    the legal capacity to contract have actually
    accepted all obligations and benefits under the
    contract and have exchanged, or promised to
    exchange, things of value

12
Three Theories of Contract Law
  • The equal value theory or equity theory
  • insisted that a contract would be valid only if
    the things exchanged were of equal value
  • bartering

13
Three Theories of Contract Law
  • If each element is present, then a contract
    exists, regardless of what the parties may argue
    after the fact
  • The formalist theory of contract law
  • the courts look to see if certain elements exist
  • offer, acceptance, mutual, assent, capacity,
    consideration, and legality.

14
The Six Elements of a Contract
15
Contracts and the UCC
  • The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) is a unified
    set of statutes designed to govern almost all
    commercial transactions
  • Article 2 of the UCC sets down the rules that
    govern sale-of-goods contracts

16
Contracts and Other Agreements
  • All contracts are agreements, but not all
    agreements are contracts.
  • To be enforceable, an agreement must conform to
    the law of contracts.

17
Question?
  • When both parties have a legally recognized
    interest in the subject of the contract it is
    called ________.
  • Privity
  • Judgment
  • Contractual obligation
  • Gordon defense

18
Contracts and Privity
  • Privity
  • both parties have a legally recognized interest
    in the subject of the contract if they are to be
    bound by it

19
Contractual Characteristics
  • Valid contract
  • one that is legally binding and fully enforceable
    by the court
  • Void contract
  • one that has no legal effect whatsoever

20
Contractual Characteristics
  • Voidable contract
  • one that may be avoided or canceled by one of the
    parties
  • Unenforceable contract
  • one that, because of some rule of law, cannot be
    upheld by a court of law

21
Question?
  • What type of contract is one in which both
    parties make promises?
  • Voided contract
  • Unilateral contract
  • Express contract
  • Bilateral contract

22
Contractual Characteristics
  • Unilateral contract
  • an agreement in which one party makes a promise
    to do something in return for an act of some sort
  • Bilateral contract
  • one in which both parties make promises
  • Breach of contract
  • occurs when one of the two parties fails to keep
    the promise

23
Contractual Characteristics
  • Express contract
  • requires some sort of written or spoken
    expression indicating a desire to enter the
    contractual relationship
  • Implied contract
  • created by the actions or gestures of the parties
    involved in the transaction

24
Contractual Characteristics
  • Informal contract
  • Any oral or written contract that is not under
    seal or is not a contract of record
  • Formal contract
  • has to be (1) written (2) signed, witnessed, and
    placed under the seal of the parties and (3)
    delivered
  • Contract of record

25
Contractual Characteristics
  • Executory contract
  • A contract that has not yet been fully performed
    by the parties is called an
  • Executed contract
  • When a contracts terms have been completely and
    satisfactorily carried out by both parties
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