Contracts I Outline
Contracts I Outline
Contracts I Outline
Testing Strategy
5 basic terms-
1. Express K- 1 word definition… verbal
2. Implied K- based at least in part on conduct
3. Quasi K- equitable remedy
A. equitable tells you that it isn’t K law.
B. Since it is an equitable remedy, it is about doing what is fair. Any time
that something seems unfair if K law is applied, you need a paragraph
on quasi-K relief… ex: promissory estoppel.
4. Bilateral and Unilateral K- bilateral is a K that results from an offer that is
open as to how it can be accepted. Unilateral is the kind of K that results from
an offer that requires performance for acceptance.
5. Executory- when a K is described as executory, it has not yet been performed.
Approach to examining a K:
1. Is there a deal?
A. To identify Offer and Acceptance Look For:
i. Manifestation of mutual assent through words or conduct
ii. Evidence that shows that the person was committed to deal.
iii. What was in mind and heart is usually irrelevant- no looking for an
intention of commitment, but rather an actual manifestation.
iv. Look at fact pattern for the party’s communication- something
wrong with the words needs to be picked up on.
1. missing terms?
2. incomplete communication?
a. There is no longer a requirement that a
communication contain all of the material terms in
order to be an offer.
3. ambiguous terms?
a. fair
b. reasonable
c. appropriate
d. in common law- the price needs to be in clear terms
to have manifestation of commitment.
e. in UCC- I can offer to sell a car w/o a price.
4. context?
a. What is the setting?
i. Bargaining history?
1. if there is a history that precedes the
negotiation, it adds to argument that
this is a manifestation of
commitment.
ii. Advertisements?
1. General Rule- an advertisement is
NOT an offer, but an invitation to
make an offer. There are exceptions,
they focus on whether the
advertisement is specific about how
many of the advertised items are
available, and specific on who can
accept it.
4. Consideration
A. Historical documents had to be under a seal
B. Consideration is all about manifestation of mutual assent
C. Promises are part of consideration.
i. Promise can be consideration for another promise.
D. As a general rule, courts do not decide on the reasonableness of the
amount of consideration.
E. 4 Step Approach to Discuss Consideration-
1. Figure out the promise in question
2. Make sure you know who the promisor is and who the
promisee is.
3. What was the person who made the promise asking for in
exchange?
a. Either a return performance, a return promise to
perform, or a forbearance
i. Ex: Hamer v. Sidway- no drinking or
gambling until 21.
4. Was this thing that was bargained for, a detriment to the
promisor, or a benefit to the promisee?
a. Benefit/Detriment Theory
b. Only 3 situations where issue of detriment needs to
be discussed in answering the Q:
i. 1st Situation- involving past consideration.
Past consideration is not sufficient, must
have a new benefit or detriment. Stuff that
previously happened cannot be
consideration to promise.
1. Ex: parent promised to pay for son’s
medical care after the kid died…
then dad decides not to pay.
ii. 2nd Situation- Pre-existing legal duty rule.
Doing something that you are already
legally obligated to do is not consideration
for a promise.
iii. 3rd Situation- party payment on a debt that is
due and undisputed is not consideration for a
release from the debt. Promisor here is not
asking for a new benefit, the money was
already owed. Therefore it cannot be a
consideration.
F. Substitutes for Consideration
i. Promissory Estoppel
1. What is the promise in question
2. Who is the promisor?
3. Who is the promisee?
4. Was this thing (action or inaction) that the promisee did,
caused or induced by the promise?
5. Should the promisor have anticipated that the promisee’s
action in reliance was foreseeable?
6. Whether this foreseeable action in reliance on the promise
makes it unjust not to enforce the promise?
ii. Moral Obligation Exception
1. Even though there is no consideration, there may be a
moral obligation to enforce the K.
a. Only some courts will do this
i. Ex: promise to pay for a benefit previously
incurred… worker rescues boss, boss
promises to pay him.
Final piece of is there a deal? Did the other person pick up on the deal? Did they accept?
1. Look who is accepting; AND
2. How they are accepting
1. Who is Accepting?
a. It must be a person to whom the offer was made
b. The offeree must know of the offer.
2. How are they Accepting?
a. The offeror can control how acceptance happens
i. Bilateral K- can be accepted in any way
ii. Unilateral K- can only be accepted by performance.
iii. Restatement 1st- unless offer expressly requires performance, it is a
bilateral offer.
♦ The offer is made, and then in response to the offer, the person to whom the offer was
made, starts performance. General Rule- the start of performance is generally viewed as
a promise to perform and generally is viewed as acceptance.
1. Promissory Estoppel
Elements:
1. promise
2. relaince
a. Doctrine in equity that states that a promise is binding if the
person who made it (promisor) could reasonably expect another
(promisee) to rely upon it in a substantial way and that the
promise did indeed rely upon it… despite the lack of
consideration.
b. The promisor is estopped, or barred, from denying his promise
created a K, even though one has not been made in a normal
way.
c. Promissory
Promise
Promise would educe reliance
Promise does induce reliance
Promisee suffers a detriment
2. Equitable Estoppel
a. Doctrine which prevents a person from asserting a right he
otherwise would have had b/c of the effect his conduct would
have on another.
b. Prevents a party from taking unfair advantage of another when,
through false language or conduct, the person to be estopped
has induced another person to act in a certain way, resulting in
the other party being injured in some way.
c. Involves the idea of fairness
d. That is, A relies on B’s acts and conduct and would be injured
if B repudiates his acts and conducts, fairness (and the law)
holds that B should be prevented from so repudiating.
e. Equitable
Circumstance or fact taken to be true
D’s assertion amounts to a rebuttal of those facts
P relied on original facts and would suffer a detriment
w/o enforcement.
3. Ricketts v. Scothorn (1898)
a. Promise made by grandfather was not considered a bargain, yet
still enforced… why?
Katie relied on the promise made by her grandfather
and therefore his estate is estopped from taking back
the promise.
There was reliance and one party would have suffered
a detriment if the promise was not kept.
4. Bank of Standish v. Curry’s (1993)
a. Lender should expect and anticipate that a promise to lend
needed money would educe a borrower to rely on the promise
by making preparations for the loan.
b. A promise to continue to refinance or roll over debt appears
similar to an oral K to loan money in the future.
c. There was sufficient evidence of a clear and definite promise to
support a claim for relief on the theory of promissory estoppel.
5. What are Remedies to violation of the Reliance Principle?
a. Expectation Interest
the interest of a non-breaching party in receiving a
benefit that would have resulted if the K had been
performed.
b. Reliance Interest
the interest a non-breaching party has in recovering
costs stemming from the party’s reliance on the
performance of the K.
6. HYPOS:
a. Scothorn has never seen Mr. Ricketts before. Mr. R walks into
the store and says women shouldn’t work. Here is a note for
$2000- go home. Is this enforceable as the actual Rickets v.
Scothorn was?
No, reasonable reliance does not seem to be the case
here.
He was a stranger- no special relationship.
Promises/Gifts:
Gifts/Promises-
1. Not enforceable- but why?
b/c the relationship of the parties
market-relationship
expectation
the nature of what a gift is… law should not get involved.
Outside the market realm
2. Why should we enforce promises?
Predictability
Reliability
Right thing to do
We want a civilized society- w/ rules and trust
Commerce hinges upon it
Efficient
Builds/maintains relationships b/w parties
3rd party benefits
compensate for injury
Social/cultural society we want to promote
o Promote bigger social policy
Enforcing Promises
b. Universal in Position
Interpreting the words/conduct as an observer
placed in the position of the recipient of the
communication.
This positioned reasonableness is the most
common.
c. Socially Situated
Interpreting the words/conduct as according to
the understanding of an observer who is placed
in the position of the recipient of the
communication BUT ALSO has the social
identity of the recipient.
Good in theory, but may not be practical…
judges may not be able to perceive standards of
reasonableness other than their won.
OFFER:
o An invitation for someone to accept
something.
o The manifestation of willingness to
enter into a bargain or exchange
o Standard= would a reasonable person
think that her assent would conclude the bargain?
o Offer is open until there is either an
acceptance or rejection
Once one of these happen, the
offer no longer stands.
o Offeror controls the offer
o Any changes to the offer equals a
rejection and a counter offer
o Freely revocable- need to communicate
to the offeree that the offer has been terminated… can
communicate indirectly
o If there is no offer standing, then there is
nothing to accept.
Understanding Definiteness
Wrap-Up Consideration…
We are being pulled from the “formalism” view into the “fair/justice” area.
o Past performance, benefit/detriment, preexisting duty, illusory, public
policy, nominal… all don’t “fit” in “formalism” and we don’t want to
deny justice in order to preserve the basic historical rules… so we get into
a fuzzy area.
o In some instances consideration works, other times it does not. Look at
the facts to see if you can get it to apply.
Promissory Estoppel § 90
A promise may be enforceable as a K if “the promisor should reasonably expect”
that the promise would “induce action or forbearance on the part of the promise or
a 3rd person” and the promise “does induce such action or forbearance,” “if
injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise.”
The enforcement of unbargained-for promises that induce reliance.
If using § 90- the determination of whether the promisor should have anticipated
the promisee’s reliance requires both intensive scrutiny of the facts of the case
and the application of abstract principles of foreseeability.
Promissory estoppel is a way of enforcing a promise w/o offer and acceptance or
mutual assent.
Equitable estoppel- if a person makes a statement of fact and another person relies
upon it, then the 1st person may not later claim that the statement of fact was
incorrect.
PE will come up where courts have a hard time implying K formation doctrine: in
employment situations, gifts, and unjust enrichment.
4. Franchisee/Franchisor Relationship-
Why apply PE to these?
b/c we can’t fit these into the traditional K doctrine, we
need promissory estoppel doctrine to inject a sense of
justice/fairness into the relationship.
The imbalance of control calls for an equitable doctrine
Inexperience of franchisee introduces reliance on
franchisor
9. Limitations on PE-
a. the detriment suffered in reliance must be substantial in an
economic sense (hurt feelings is not good enough)
b. the substantial loss to the promisee in action in reliance must
have been foreseeable by the promisor
c. the promisee must have acted reasonably in justifiable reliance
on the promise as made.
In answering Q #1:
The following classes are subject to SOF- forbidding enforcement unless
there is a writing:
1. a K of an executor or administrator to answer for a duty of his
decedent
2. a K to answer for the debt of another
3. K made in consideration of marriage
4. K for the sale of an interest in land
5. a K that is not to be performed w/in one year from the making of
the K
- does that mean start
performance or complete performance? Points to consider.
In answering Q #2:
If you answer that it fits into one of the categories, then decide if there is a
writing (any writing signed by or on behalf of the party to be charged,
which…)
1. reasonably identifies the subject matter of the K
2. is sufficient to indicate that a K w/ respect thereto has been
made b/w the parties or offered by the signer to the other party
3. states w/ reasonable certainty the essential terms of the
unperformed promises in the K
a. the writing does not have to be formal, complete, or
even correct… we just don’t want people making K’s
up out of thin air.