Definition: A contract arises from a legally enforceable promise.
Essential Elements: Under common law, a contract requires:
- Offer: A proposal made by one party (offeror).
- Acceptance: Agreement by the other party (offeree).
- Consideration: Exchange of something of legal value (not a gift or donation).
Quote: "A promise becomes an enforceable contract when there is an offer by one party that is accepted by another with legally sufficient consideration."
- Counter Offer: A counter offer rejects the original offer and requires acceptance by the original offeror to form a contract.
- Essential Terms: Key terms like price and subject matter must be agreed upon.
Quote: "For a promise to become an enforceable contract, the parties must also agree on essential terms such as price and subject matter."
- Vague or Indefinite Contracts: Courts may enforce these if conduct clarifies the agreement.
- Forms of Contracts:
II. Challenging Contract Validity
Certain circumstances allow a party to challenge a contract:
- Illegality: If the subject matter (e.g., illegal drugs) or consideration is unlawful.
- Fraud: Intentional deception inducing a party to enter the contract.
- Duress: Force, threats, or undue pressure leading to agreement.
- Lack of Capacity: One party lacks legal ability to contract (e.g., minor, mentally incompetent).
III. Third-Party Rights
- Third-Party Beneficiary Contracts: Some contracts are enforceable by intended third parties.
- Assignment & Delegation:
IV. Role of Lawyers and Common Contract Clauses
Lawyers' Role: Drafting, negotiating, and advising on contracts, often using templates tailored to specific situations.
Common Contract Clauses:
- Acceleration: Requires earlier payment under certain conditions.
- Assignment: Governs the transfer of rights/obligations.
- Confidentiality: Protects sensitive information from disclosure.
- Consideration: Specifies what motivates each party to enter the contract.
- Force Majeure: Excuses performance due to uncontrollable events (e.g., natural disasters).
- Liquidated Damages: Predetermines compensation for breach.
- Entire Agreement (Merger): States the written contract is complete and overrides prior agreements.
- Severability: Ensures remaining terms remain valid if a clause is unenforceable.
- Termination: Defines how and when the contract can end.
- Payment of Costs: Determines financial responsibility for contract-related expenses.
Conclusion:This episode provides an overview of contract formation, validity challenges, third-party rights, and common clauses. Understanding these principles helps navigate legal agreements effectively.