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TYPES OF ENGLISH CIVIL LAW Unit 29. Preview  Contract: definition  Requirements for a valid English contract  Forms of contract  Void and voidable.

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Presentation on theme: "TYPES OF ENGLISH CIVIL LAW Unit 29. Preview  Contract: definition  Requirements for a valid English contract  Forms of contract  Void and voidable."— Presentation transcript:

1 TYPES OF ENGLISH CIVIL LAW Unit 29

2 Preview  Contract: definition  Requirements for a valid English contract  Forms of contract  Void and voidable contracts  Breach of contract  Torts: definition  Types of tort  Legal terms  Exercise

3 English Civil Law  Law of Contract  Law of Tort

4 Definition of Contract  “A legally binding agreement made between two or more persons, which the courts will enforce  Agreement arises as a result of offer and acceptance

5 Requirements for a valid contract  1. Offer, acceptance, consideration  2. Intention to create legal relations  3. Contractual capacity  4. Formal legal requirements

6 Offer  An indication of willingness to do or refrain from doing something that is capable of being converted by acceptance into a legally binding contract

7 Offer  It is made by an offeror to an offeree and is capable of acceptance only by an offeree who knows of its existence

8 Acceptance  Agreement to the terms of an offer that converts the offer into a legally binding contract  Acceptance must involve some action on the part of the offeree

9 Consideration  The price, in money, goods, or some other reward, paid by one person in exchange for another person promising to do something, which is an essential element in the formation of a contract

10 Consideration  Kompenzacija, poravnanje, protuizvršenje; kod ugovora potrebno je preuzimanje obveze, ali i razmjena vrijednosti

11 Contractual capacity  Competence to enter into a legally binding agreement  Persons lacking this capacity:  minors, the mentally disordered, etc.

12 Forms of contract  oral,  written,  partly oral and partly written, or  implied from conduct

13 Void contract  A contract that has no legal force from the moment of its making  Lack of capacity to contract, mistake, illegal contracts

14 Voidable contract  Liable to be set aside by one of the parties on such grounds as misrepresentation or undue influence

15 Breach of contract  Failure by a party to perform his obligations under that contract

16 Areas  Shipping contracts,  hire purchase,  sale of goods, etc.

17 Definition of Tort  Wrongs committed by one citizen against another, serious enough to merit the award of compensation to the injured person, but not serious enough to amount to the breaking of the criminal law

18 Tort  Civil liability  Less serious wrongs which are not punished by the state

19 Tort  A wrongful act or omission for which damages can be obtained in a civil court by the person wronged, other than a wrong that is only a breach of contract

20 Tort  Compensation in the form of damages is awarded to the injured party, after the offender (tort-feasor) has been sued by the person he has injured

21 Definition of tort  Sir John Salmond: “A tort is a civil wrong for which the remedy is a common law action for unliquidated damages, and which is not exclusively the breach of a contract or a breach of a trust or other merely equitable obligation.”

22 Damages  A sum of money awarded by a court as compensation for a tort or a breach of contract  The claimant is entitled to full compensation for his losses

23 Law of tort  Concerned with providing compensation for personal injury and property damage caused by negligence  Protects other interests, such as reputation, personal freedom, title to property, enjoyment of property, commercial interests

24 Law of tort: types  Negligence  Nuisance  Trespass  Defamation (libel and slander)

25 Negligence  1. Carelessness amounting to the culpable breach of a duty; failure to do sth that a reasonable person would do  2. A tort consisting of the breach of the duty of care resulting in damage to the claimant

26 Nuisance  Something that causes harm or inconvenience to someone or to property

27 Private nuisance  Examples of nuisances interfering with the comfort, convenience, or health of an occupant are foul odors, noxious gases, smoke, dust, loud noises, excessive light, or high temperatures.  A nuisance may also disturb an occupant's mental tranquility, such as a neighbor who keeps a vicious dog, even though an injury is only threatened and has not actually occurred.

28 Tresspass  The tort of interfering with the land or goods of another person

29 Tresspass  1. tresspass to goods (harming or interfering with goods which belong to someone else)  2. tresspass to land  3. tresspass to person (assault, false imprisonment)

30 Trepass  Trespass is sometimes confused with nuisance, but the two are distinct.  A trespass action protects against an invasion of one's right to exclusive possession of land.  If a landowner drops a tree across her neighbor's boundary line she has committed a trespass; if her dog barks all night keeping the neighbor awake, she may be liable for nuisance.

31 Defamation  The act of injuring someone’s reputation by maliciously saying or writing things against him or her that are not true  1. Libel (written d.)  2. Slander (spoken d.)

32 Law of contract/law of tort  Some torts: also breaches of contract (e.g. negligent driving by a taxi-driver that causes injury to his passenger- both tort of negligence and breach of contract to carry the passenger safely to his destination)

33 Law of tort/criminal law  Many torts are also crimes: e.g. assault, dangerous driving

34 Assault  An intentional or reckless act that causes someone to be put in fear of immediate physical harm

35 Assault  Actual physical contact is not necessary to constitute an assault (e.g. pointing a gun at someone may constitute an assault)

36 Other areas of civil law  Family law  Revenue law  Patents and copyrights  Trade unions  Administrative law

37 Legal terms  Law of contract  Ugovorno pravo  Tort  Šteta, štetna radnja, građanski delikt  Law of Torts  Građansko deliktno pravo

38 Legal terms  Forebearance  Nečinjenje (u građanskom pravu)  Hire purchase  Kupnja na kredit

39 Legal terms  Civil liability  Građanskopravna odgovornost  Tort-feasor  Počinitelj štete; počinitelj delikta (u građanskom postupku)  Sue  Sudski goniti, pokrenuti postupak

40 Legal terms  Unliquidated damages  Neugovorena odšteta  Liquidated damages  Ugovorena odšteta (zbog neizvršenja ugovora

41 Legal terms  Trust  Prijenos imovine na povjerenika; fiducijarni odnos, povjereno upravljanje u korist drugog; skrbništvo

42 Legal terms  Negligence  Nehaj, nemar, nepažnja  Nuisance  Smetnja, ometanje, uznemirivanje  Tresspass  Ometanje posjeda, povreda prava privatnosti, bespravno stupanje na tuđi posjed

43 Legal terms  Defamation  Kleveta, uvreda  Libel  Pisana kleveta  Slander  Usmena kleveta

44 Legal terms  Family law  Obiteljsko pravo  Revenue law  zakon o prihodima

45 Exercise: What is a contract?  Complete the text using the following: agreement, breach, capacity, consideration, damages, fraud, illegal, obligation, oral, performance, property, signed, terms

46 What is a contract? agreement, breach, capacity, consideration, damages, fraud, illegal, obligation, oral, performance, property, signed, terms  It is an agreement that creates a binding ____ upon the parties. The essentials of a contract are as follows: mutual ____; a legal ____which in most instances need not be financial; parties who have legal ____to make a contract; absence of ____or duress; and a subject matter that is not ____or against public policy.

47 What form does a contract take? agreement, breach, capacity, consideration, damages, fraud, illegal, obligation, oral, performance, property, signed, terms  In general, contracts may be either ___or written. Certain types of contracts, however, in order to be enforceable, must be written and ____. These include contracts involving the sale and transfer of _____.

48 How does a contract end? agreement, breach, capacity, consideration, damages, fraud, illegal, obligation, oral, performance, property, signed, terms  In case of a ____of contract, the injured party may go to court to sue for financial compensation (or ____), or for rescission, for injunction, or for specific performance if financial compensation would not compensate for the breach. Specific____of a contract is the right by one contracting party to have the other contracting party perform the contract according to the precise___ agreed

49 Key:  It is an agreement that creates a binding obligation upon the parties. The essentials of a contract are as follows: mutual agreement; a legal consideration which in most instances need not be financial; parties who have legal capacity to make a contract; absence of fraud or duress; and a subject matter that is not illegal or against public policy.

50 Key  In general, contracts may be either oral or written. Certain types of contracts, however, in order to be enforceable, must be written and signed. These include contracts involving the sale and transfer of property.

51 Key  In case of a breach of contract, the injured party may go to court to sue for financial compensation (or damages), or for rescission, for injunction, or for specific performance of financial compensation would not compensate for the breach. Specific performance of a contract is the right by one contracting party to have the other contracting party perform the contract according to the precise terms agreed


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