Chapter 14 Consideration Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 11 Mutual Consideration. What is Consideration? Promisor - the person who gives the promise or action in exchange for the promise or action of.
Advertisements

CHAPTER 15: BARGAINED-FOR CONSIDERATION. Learning Objectives: Nature of the Consideration Requirement Bargain Theory of Consideration Mutuality of Obligation.
Chapter 11 CONSIDERATION.
Consideration Chapter 8.
Business Law: Ch 8 Consideration.
Section 8.1.
LAW for Business and Personal Use © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible.
Mutual Consideration ● 9-1 What is Consideration? ● 9-2 Legal Value and Bargained-For Exchange ● 9-3 When is Consideration Not Required?
Chapter 10 Consideration McGraw-Hill ©2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 9 Consideration Chapter 9: Consideration.
CONSIDERATION.
Texas Real Estate Contracts 4 th Edition © 2015 OnCourse Learning.
Comprehensive Volume, 18 th Edition Chapter 15: Consideration.
Copyright © 2008 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 15 Contracts: Consideration Twomey Jennings Anderson’s Business.
Copyright © 2008 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 23 Nature and Form of Sales Contracts Twomey Jennings Anderson’s.
Chapter 4: Consideration (Bargained for Exchange)
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 11 Consideration and Equity Chapter 11 Consideration and Equity.
Prepared by Douglas Peterson, University of Alberta 8-1 Part 3 – The Law of Contract Chapter 8 Requirement of Consideration.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Performance and Discharge Chapter 8. Discharge Discharge usually results from performance but can occur in other ways: (1) the occurrence or failure of.
Business Law and the Regulation of Business Chapter 12: Consideration
BUSINESS Law Chapter 9 Mutual Consideration.
CHAPTER 8 Consideration
Chapter 16 Form of Contract Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
CHAPTER 11 CONSIDERATION: THE BASIS OF THE BARGAIN DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment (8 th Ed.)
Business Law - Week 3 Class Agenda Other information: Good Samaritan Law | International Law Review Week 2 Case Study Break Discussion: Contracts continued.
Essentials Of Business Law Chapter 8 Consideration McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 13 Capacity and Genuine Assent Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
Contract Law for Paralegals: Traditional and E-Contracts © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All rights reserved Consideration Chapter.
Chapter 7 Contract Formation Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent.
Prepared by Michael Bozzo, Mohawk College Part 3 – The Law of Contract Chapter 8 – Requirement of Consideration © 2015 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited 8-1.
Introduction to Contracts Chapter 8. Definition of Contract A contract is a promise or a set of promises for the breach of which the law gives a remedy.
Chapter 9 Mutual Consideration. Consideration Main purpose of consideration is to distinguish between social promises and more serious transactions where.
Consideration 2.01 Understanding elements and characteristics of a contract.
LAW for Business and Personal Use © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible.
CONTRACTS IN SPORT AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY Chapter 10.
Week 04 Agreements and Contracts. Contracts A contract is a legally enforceable agreement between two or more competent persons. A valid contract is one.
Nature and Terminology and Agreement in Traditional and E- Contracts Chapter 11 & 12.
Consideration Chapter 8. Consideration – what a person demands and generally must receive in order to make a contract legally binding.
Law for Business and Personal Use © Thomson South-Western CHAPTER 8 Consideration 8-1Types of Consideration 8-2Questionable Consideration 8-3When Consideration.
Consideration Objective 3.01 Chapter 8 – Page 173.
Chapter 8 Consideration. Gratuitous: Free Agreements Consideration : The exchange of benefits and detriments by the parties to an agreement. Benefit:
CONTRACTS Chapter 9 Introduction to Contracts. CONTRACTS A AGREEMENT between two or more persons the PERFORMANCE of which the law considers to be an OBLIGATION.
By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts
Chapter 24 Nature and Forms of Sales Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
8.1 Chapter 8 Introduction to Contracts and Their Formation Contract © 2003 by West Legal Studies in Business/A Division of Thomson Learning.
CHAPTER 3: FORMANTION OF A CONTRACT Emond Montgomery Publications 1.
Chapter 32 Rights of Holders, Defenses, and Liability Issues Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
Copyright © 2010 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. and the Legal Environment, 10 th edition by Richard.
LAW FOR BUSINESS AND PERSONAL USE © SOUTH-WESTERN PUBLISHING Chapter 9Slide 1 When Is Consideration Not Required? Identify when promissory estoppel applies.
Consideration Agreement Law
Consideration CHAPTER EIGHT. 8 | 2 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Consideration A contract must be supported by consideration.
Copyright © 2010 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. and the Legal Environment, 10 th edition by Richard.
Mutual Consideration. What is Consideration?  Main purpose to distinguish between social promises and more serious transaction where one thing is exchanged.
Achieving Contract Formation
The Nature of Consideration
David P. Twomey - Boston College
Contract & Consumer Law Chapter 2
Chapter 11 Contracts: Consideration
Chapter 13: Contracts – Consideration
Chapter 12 Contracts: Consideration
Chapter 12 Contracts: Consideration
Chapter 8 Consideration
Chapter 11 Consideration and Promissory Estoppel
Chapter 11 Consideration and Promissory Estoppel
Chapter 15 CONSIDERATION
The Nature of a Contract
Chapter 12 Consideration
Chapter 11 Consideration
CHAPTER 9 Test review.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 14 Consideration Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 142 The Nature of Consideration [14-1] Contract for the sale of a Ford Torino by Jake Plumber to Tom Irvin for $1272 benefitdetriment $1272 Jake Plumber Tom Irvin detrimentbenefit Ford Torino Loan by Bank Two to Tom Irvin for purchase of Ford Torino benefitdetriment Repayment of $1272 plus 8% interest Bank TwoTom Irvin benefit $1272 Gift of Ford Torino by Tom Irvin to his sister Becky, as a graduation gift benefit detriment none Tom Irvin Becky Irvin detriment benefi t Ford Torino detriment A gift does not have consideration. A promise to make a gift is not enforceable.

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 143 Consideration and Promises Consideration as the Price Act Promise To Act To Forbear The Promise Binding + Exceptions to Consideration Charitable Subscription Uniform Commercial Code Sealed and Written Instruments Promissory Estoppel What Is Not Consideration Unrequested Benefit Promise to Perform Existing Obligation Moral Obligation Illegal Consideration Not Binding

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 144 Chapter 14 Summary A promise is not binding if there is no consideration for the promise. Consideration is what the promisor requires as the price for the promise. That price may be doing an act, refraining from the doing of an act, or merely promising to do or to refrain. In a bilateral contract, it is necessary to find that the promise of each party is supported by consideration. If either promise is not so supported, it is not binding, and the agreement of the parties is not a contract.

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 145 Consequently, the agreement cannot be enforced. When a promise is the consideration, it must be a binding promise. The binding character of a promise is not affected by the circumstance that there is a condition precedent to the performance promised. Likewise, the binding character of the promise and of the contract is not affected by a provision in the contract for its cancellation by either one or both of the parties. Chapter 14 Summary [2]

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 146 A promise to do what one is already obligated to do is not consideration, although some exceptions are made. Such exceptions include the rendering of a partial performance or a modified performance accepted as a good-faith adjustment to a changed situation, a compromise and release of claims, a part-payment check, and a compromise of creditors. Chapter 14 Summary [3]

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 147 Because consideration is the price that is given to obtain the promise, past benefits conferred on the promissor cannot be consideration. In the case of a complex transaction, however, the past benefit and the subsequent transaction relating to the promise may in fact have been intended by the parties as one transaction. In such a case, the earlier benefit is not past consideration but is the consideration contemplated by the promissor as the price for the promise subsequently made. Chapter 14 Summary [4]

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 148 A promise to refrain from doing an act can be consideration. A promise to refrain from suing or asserting a particular claim can be consideration. Generally, the promise to forbear must be for a specified time as distinguished from agreeing to forbear at will. When consideration is forbearance to assert a claim, it is immaterial whether the claim is valid as long as the claim has been asserted in good faith in the belief that it was valid. Chapter 14 Summary [5]

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 149 When the promissor obtains the consideration specified for the promise, the law is not ordinarily concerned with the value or adequacy of that consideration. Exceptions are sometimes made in the case of fraud or unconscionability and under consumer protection statutes. Chapter 14 Summary [6]

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 1410 There is a current trend to abandon the requirement of consideration, with promissory estoppel the most extensive repudiation of that requirement. All transactions must be lawful; therefore, consideration for a promise must be legal. If it is not, there is no consideration, and the promise is not binding. Chapter 14 Summary [7]

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 1411 When the promissor does not actually receive the price promised for the promise, there is a failure of consideration, which constitutes a breach of the contract. Chapter 14 Summary [8]

(c) West Legal Studies Chapter 1412 Although consideration is required to make a promise binding, the promise that is not supported by consideration is not unlawful or illegal. If the promissor voluntarily performs the promise, the promissor cannot undo the performance and restore matters to their position prior to the making of the agreement. The parties are free to perform their agreement, but the courts will not help either of them because there is no contract. Chapter 14 Summary [9]