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Lecture notes Contract Law (LAW1030) Contract Law, ISBN: 9780198855293 £13.49   Add to cart

Lecture notes

Lecture notes Contract Law (LAW1030) Contract Law, ISBN: 9780198855293

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Notes for both semesters of Contract Law in the University of Leeds.

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  • April 21, 2023
  • 112
  • 2022/2023
  • Lecture notes
  • Module leader: qi zhou
  • All classes
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CONTRACT LAW NOTES

What is Contract?

Contract is a legally enforceable agreement.

 Promises and agreements are made every day, but these are not contracts.
 The key of the contract is the legal enforcement.

It is an agreement, so at least there will be two parties to a contract.

 There could be multiple parties in a contract as well. Ex: a society.

The essence of the contract is the freedom of contract.

 A person is free to decide whether to make a contract.
 A person is free with whom to make a contract.
 A person is free on what terms the contract is made.
 It couldn’t be an imposition to be a contract, must be a personal decision.

Contract is legally enforceable: it creates legal obligations for the parties.

 If one party fails to perform his actual contract obligations after making a valid
contract, he will be liable for breach his contract.
 Parties assume the legal obligation and sanctions derived from the contract.

Examples:

 Tim and Rob agree to have a drink together after the contract law lectures.
o NOT A CONTRACT.
o Not legally enforceable, no legal implications.
 You accept an offer made by the University of Leeds to study LLB course at
the School of Law.
o CONTRACT.

Four elements of contract

First question to get a legal contract: is this a valid contract?

Elements of a valid contract:

 Offer
 Acceptance
 Intention to create legal relations
 Consideration

,Finding parties intention

Subjective test: it is applied when a non-mistaken party intends to take advantage of
the mistaken party.

 What are the parties’ true intention?
 This test is applied in exceptional cases

Objective test: the test that is normally applied.

 What would a reasonable person in the shoes of the party think?

Lecture 2: Formation of Contract (part one)

Process of formation of contract:

Offer + Acceptance + Consideration + Intention to create legal relation = Contract.

Offer: a proposal made by one party to form a contract on the stated terms to
another party or a group of people.

 Party making the offer: offeror.
 Party to whom the offer is made: offeree.
o The offeree could also be a group of people.
 The offer can be done orally in writing. There is no requirement for form.

Elements of Offer

Element 1: intention.

 Clear intention of the offeror to be bound on stated terms.
 No need for further negotiation on the terms stated if its ready for acceptance.

Element 2: certainty of key terms.

 An offer must contain specific key terms.
o Ex: how much is going to be charge for the item, the item itself.
 An offer does need to contain all the terms of the contract.
 Key terms must be certain.

Example 1: I send you a letter that I am willing to sell my BMW x5 to you for 40.000.

Intention: yes.

 The offeror clearly expressed his intention of the realization of a transaction.
 He said that he is willing to sell his car.

Certainty of key terms: yes.

IT IS AN OFFER.

,Example 2: I send you a letter stating that I am considering selling my BMW x 5 you
for £40,000, if you are interested, please get back to me.

 It is missing the intention element.

Example 3: I send you a letter stating that I am willing to sell one of my cars to you
for £40,000.

 Certainty of key terms: no.
o It is not stating which car is it going to sell you.

What is an invitation to treat?

Invitation to treat: a statement indicating willingness to receive offers or negotiation
from the other party.

 The main difference between offer and invitation to treat is the intention of the
party making the statement.
o Invitation to treat lead to an offer.




Gibson v Manchester City Council [1979] 1 WLR 294.

Manchester City Council sent a letter to Gibson stating: “The corporation may be
prepared to sell the house to you for £2,180 (freehold)... If you would like to make a
formal application to buy, please complete the enclosed application form and return
it to me as soon as possible.”

 It is an invitation to treat.
o MCC are extending an invitation to do a formal application in case they
want to make a treat.
 Filling up the formal application would be the formal treat.

, Harvey v Facey [1893] AC 552.

The dispute is about if the parties have made a contract for the sale of a property in
Jamaica.

 “Claimant: “will you sell us Bumper Hall Pen? Telegraph the lowest price.”
 Defendant: “lowest price for Bumper Hall Pen £900.”
 Claimant: “We agree to buy Bumper Hall Pen for the sum of nine hundred
pounds”.
 Defendant does not reply”.

Is it an offer or an invitation to treat?

 The defendant never accepted the offer that was proposed.
o It means that there is no contract at all.
o The serious offer was the time in which the claimant expressed his
intention to buy the property for a previously accorded sum.
 Intentions are not clear: defendant never expressed that he was willing to sell.
o The first contact of the claimant was not an offer.

Advertisement

Partridge v Crittenden [1968] 2 All ER 421.

“Brambelefinch cocks, Bramblefinch hens 25s each”.

 By reading these, there is no clear intentions to sell.
o They’re just promoting a product, but they hadn’t manifested any
particular willing to any offeror to sell their products.
 It is an invitation to treat because, no clear intention to be bound on the terms.
 General principle: an advertisement itself it’s not considered an offer but an
invitation to treat.
o This was a leading case in terms of this general principle.

Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. [1893] 1 QB 256.

Advertisement offering to pay £100 to any person who caught influenza after using
the smoke ball remedy in the specified manner. To show its sincerity, the company
deposited £1,000 in its bank.

 In this case, there was a clear expression from the company to be bound.
o The company deposited £1,000 in its bank.
o It was a formal movement from them expressing their intentions.
 An advertisement is normally an invitation to treat, but if the party has a clear
intention to be bound on the terms, it is an offer.

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