Contracts Outline
Contracts Outline
Contracts Outline
Contracts - Outline
Table of Contents
FORMATION OF CONTRACT!.........................................................................................................!2!
I. SCOPE OF K LAW!......................................................................................................................................!2!
II. CONSIDERATION!.....................................................................................................................................!3!
III. MANIFESTATION OF MUTUAL ASSENT!......................................................................................!5!
IV. OFFER!..........................................................................................................................................................!8!
V. ACCEPTANCE!............................................................................................................................................!9!
DEFENSES TO CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT!........................................................................!15!
II. MISREPRESENTATION!.......................................................................................................................!16!
III. DURESS & UNDUE INFLUENCE!....................................................................................................!16!
IV. UNCONSCIONABILITY (shock the conscience)!.......................................................................!17!
V. LACK OF CAPACITY!............................................................................................................................!18!
VI. VIOLATION OF PUBLIC POLICY!..................................................................................................!19!
INTERPRETING CONTRACT TERMS!......................................................................................!24!
I. INTERPRETING EXPRESS K TERMS!..............................................................................................!24!
II. PAROL EVIDENCE RULE!...................................................................................................................!24!
III. IMPLIED CONTRACT TERMS!........................................................................................................!27!
PERFORMANCE AND BREACH!..................................................................................................!29!
I. SUBSTANTIAL PERFORMANCE V. MATERIAL BREACH (C/L)!..........................................!29!
DAMAGES!............................................................................................................................................!30!
I. REMEDY!.....................................................................................................................................................!30!
II. MEASURE!.................................................................................................................................................!31!
III. LIMITS!.....................................................................................................................................................!31!
KEY EXAM TIPS CHECK LIST!.................................................................................................!32!
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FORMATION OF CONTRACT
I. SCOPE OF K LAW
A. Definitions What is a K?
1. Contract: a legally enforceable agreement; promise or set of promises for the
breach of which the law gives remedy, or the performance of which the law in
recognizes as a duty. [Rest. 2nd 1]
2. Promise: manifestation of intention to act/refrain from acting that justifies
promisee in understanding that commitment has been made. [Rest. 2nd 2]
3. Agreement: manifestations of mutual assent (offer + acceptance) on the part of
two or more persons [Rest. 2nd 3]
4. Bargain: an agreement to exchange promises, exchange a promise for a
performance, or exchange performances. [Rest. 2nd 3]
B. Types of Contracts
1. Express: agreement manifested by words
2. Implied-in-fact: agreement manifested by conduct
3. Implied-in-law (quasi-contract): not true K, but obligation imposed by
court despite absence of promise in order to avoid injustice to parties
C. Sources of K Law
1. Common Law (Restatement): used for everything BUT the sale of goods
2. Uniform Commercial Code (UCC): transactions involving the sale of goods,
applying to individuals and merchants
Sale: passing of title from seller to buyer for a price
[UCC 2-106]
Good: any tangible thing that is moveable at time of
identification of K [UCC 2-105]
Merchant: deals in goods of the kind or otherwise by his
occupation holds himself out as having knowledge or skill
particular to the practices or goods involved in the transaction
If K involves both goods and services, must evaluate which
constitutes the primary purpose of the K. IF primary function of K
is to provide a service, then UCC does not apply.
D. Elements of K = O + A + C [Rest. 2nd 17]
1. Mutual Assent (O + A): K formation requires mutual assent to the same terms
by the parties, manifested through Offer and Acceptance
2. Consideration: bargained exchange in which each party incurs a legal
detriment [Rest. 2nd 71]
E. Questions re: K
1. Which body of law governs ! C/L or UCC
2. K formation ! Is K legally enforceable?
3. Breach ! Did one party breach K?
4. Damages ! What does breaching party have to pay non-breaching party?
F. Hybrid Contract ! Contains both goods and services
1. To determine if UCC or Common Law governs ! Predominate Test
2. What part of the contract are you paying the most money. Most expensive part
of the contract determines which body of law governs
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II. CONSIDERATION
A. Why is consideration required?
Distinguishes what promises are or are not enforceable, or should be enforceable
Respects autonomy, reliability, moral
Certainty enforces promises that are actually made
B. Definitions of Consideration
1. Benefit/Detriment (old defn): Promisee loss or promisor gain determines
consideration in a bargain; promisor gain or promise suffer detriment
a. Appeal of Clark [C]
Facts: Sheldon (D) promises to pay Charles & wife (P) $700 note in
return for care while he is sick
Holding: When a sick individual creates a note to pay for care, that
care constitutes consideration supporting the promise to pay.
Rule: Measure of consideration in Clark determines consideration as a
promisee loss or promisor gain. (Here, D gained by receiving care.)
b. Dougherty v. Salt [No C]
Facts: D (aunt) gives P (nephew) a promissory note of $3K for value
received ! You always have done for me
Holding: No consideration for promised payment of note.
Rule: No promisee loss or promisor gain. (Here, D did not gain by
promising $ to P, and P did not lose).
2. Mutual Inducement (current defn): mutually induced bargained exchange in
which each party incurs a legal detriment
a. Rest. 2nd 71: Consideration (elements)
" Bargained exchange: promisor makes promise in exchange for
promisee performance or return promise
" Legal detriment: promisee gives up something of value or does
something not previously obligated to perform
" Promisor and promisee must mutually induce the exchange of
promises and/or performance
b. Examples:
(i) Hamer v. Sidway (II) [C]
Facts: Uncle (D) promises to nephew $5K on his 21st b-day if
he gives up drinking, gambling & smoking
Holding: Nephews abandonment of legal right
(drinking/smoking) is sufficient consideration
Rule: Reciprocal inducement created consideration
(ii) U.S. v. Meadors [NC]
Facts: Betty Jo marries husband and signs guaranty for MJD
loan (even though no signature line for her name)
Holding: No reciprocal inducement to sign guaranty, for loan
to include BJ signature, so no consideration.
** Distinction of outcomes due to different tests: Under benefit/ detriment
test, there would be consideration in U.S. v. Meadors.
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3. NOT Consideration
a.. Testamentary gift (i.e. Appeal of Clark, Dougherty v. Salt)
b. Conditional gift only one party benefits (i.e. Pensey v. American Ash)
c. Moral consideration no inducement if there is no moral obligation
d. Past consideration promise is made in return for detriment previously
suffered (i.e. A receives gift from B. then A promises to pay B)
e. Sham/nominal consideration where consideration paid is nominal or
not in fact made, then no real bargain is present
C. Special Applications of Consideration Rule
1. C/L: Contract Modification Pre-Existing Duty Rule: when a K is
modified, consideration is still required for agreement to be legally enforceable; if
responsibility of only one party, the pre-existing duty already owed by the other
party cannot serve as consideration for new promise.
a. Rest. 2nd 73: Performance of Legal Duty (traditional rule)
Performance of a legal duty owed to promisor which is neither doubtful nor
the subject of honest dispute is NOT consideration [Traditional rule]; But, a
similar performance is consideration if it differs from what was required by
the duty in way which reflects more than a pretense of bargain
In other words: agreement to do what one is already legally obligated
to do is not consideration.
Goal of rule: prevent hold-up game (i.e. B withholding $ from A in
order to get a better deal)
b. Rest. 2nd 89: Modification of Executory K (exception to Rest. 2nd 71)
Promise modifying duty under K not fully performed is binding:
(a) if modification is fair & equitable in circumstances unforeseen when K
was made; OR
(b) to extent provided by statute; OR
(c) to extent justice required because of detrimental reliance
Rest. 2nd 89 ! test to allow consideration for modified K
** All modifications must have new consideration; Exception: [Rest. 2nd 89]
c. Ex: Angel v. Murray mod. binding in unforeseen circumstances
Facts: Garbage collector has 5-yr K with City. Large unforeseen
increase in population, so City agrees to pay Garbage collector
additional $10K. P (city resident) sues City & Garbage Collector,
claiming additional payments illegal.
Holding: Modification is enforceable.
Rule: If modification is fair & equitable, voluntarily entered into by
parties, and motivated by events not anticipated when K originally
created, then modification is binding.
2. UCC: K Modification - No Pre-existing Duty Rule
a. UCC 2-209: K Modification, Rescission, and Waiver
(1) No new consideration required to enforce modification
(2) NOM clause is enforceable ! any modification must be signed by most
parties
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MUTUAL ASSENT
NO MUTUAL ASSENT
Preliminary!Negotiations!
(Optional)!
[Rest.!2nd!!!26]!
Counter?Offer!!
(by!Offeree)!!
[Rest.!2nd!!24;!!39]!
Acceptance!
Offer!
[Rest.!2nd!!24]!
Acceptance!!
[Rest.!2nd!!50]!
7!
?!Revocation,!!
?Rejections,!!
?!Lapse!of!offer,!
?!Death!
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IV. OFFER
A. Definition of Offer
1. Rest. 2nd 24: Offer Defined
Offer is the manifestation of willingness to enter into a bargain, so made as to
justify another person in understanding that his assent to that bargain is invited
and will conclude it.
Definiteness + Commitment
Offeror = Master of Offer
Offeror can change offer up until the moment that Offeree has accepted
2. Rest. 2nd 33: Certainty (see above)
(1) Terms must be reasonably certain
(2) Determine breach and craft appropriate remedy
(3) Open terms may indicated intent not to be O or A
Explicit ! fact finder left to determine what action creates what
time of intent
3. Promises contained in offer
a. Unilateral K: offer will propose an exchange of offerors promise for
offerees act/performance (i.e. promise for performance)
b. Bilateral K: exchange of promises (i.e. promise for a promise)
B. Communications that are NOT Offers
1. Party may make solicitation of bids, serving as preliminary negotiations
a. Rest. 2nd 26: Preliminary Negotiations
Manifestation of willingness to enter into a bargain is not an offer if the
person to whom it is addressed knows or has reason to know that person
making it does not intend to conclude a bargain until he has made a
further manifestation of assent.
Implicit need to look at the back & forth between parties to find
out the intent of the offer
2. Ads, catalogs, and mass mailings not offers EXCEPT when specific
language is clear and definite
a. Lefkowitz v. Great Minn. ad was offer
Facts: Store puts up 2 ads for fur coats (worth $100) and Stole
(worth $139.50) on sale for $1 to first person to arrive at store
(first come, first serve). Was ad an offer?
Held: Yes, ad constituted offer.
Rule: Offer was clear, definite, and explicit, price listed, and
nothing left for negotiation. This is exception to general rule
because ad showed definiteness and commitment.
3. Offers made in jest
b. Leonard v. PepsiCo. offer in jest not offer
Facts: Pepsi (D) commercial advertises Pepsi points and shows
Harrier Jet to cost 7 million Pepsi points. Leonard (P) believes ad
is offer for jet and collects $700K in Pepsi points. Did
commercial/ad constitute offer?
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V. ACCEPTANCE
A. Definition of Acceptance v. Counter-offer
1. Rest. 2nd 35: Oee Power of Acceptance
(1) An offer gives to the Oee a continuing power to complete manifestation of
mutual assent by acceptance of the offer.
(2) K cannot be created by acceptance of an offer after the power of acceptance
has been terminated in one of the ways listed in 35.
2. Rest. 2nd 50: Acceptance of Offer Defined
Acceptance of an offer is a manifestation of assent to the terms thereof made by
the offeree in a manner invited or required by the offer
3. Rest. 2nd 39: Counter-offers
(1) Counter-offer is an offer made by an offeree to his offeror relating to the same
matter as the original offer and proposing substituted bargain differing from that
proposed by original offer.
(2) Offerees power of acceptance is terminated by his making counter-offer,
unless the offeror has manifested a contrary intention or unless the counter-offer
manifests a contrary intention of the offeree.
B. C/L: Mirror Image Rule
1. Offerees response operates as acceptance only if it is mirror image of
offer: If offerees response makes any changes to terms of offer, then response is
NOT acceptance but rather rejection or counter-offer
2. EXCEPTION: If response includes immaterial or collateral terms
that does not affect terms of original offer, then response is acceptance
2. Last Shot rule: the party who sends the last written proposal, last shot,
creates the terms of the K
a. Ardente v. Horan acceptance as counter-offer
Facts: Ardente bids $250K on house. Horans atty sends purchase
agreement to Ardente, which he signs, sends check, and letter
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II. MISREPRESENTATION
Party makes a false assertion of fact by affirmatively lying, hiding the truth, or remaining silent
A. Misrepresentation can be fraudulent or material [Rest. 2nd 162]
1. Fraudulent [Rest. 2nd 162(1)]
If maker intends his assertion to induce party to manifest assent and the maker:
(a) knows or believes assertion is not in accord with the facts, or
(b) doesnt have confidence that he states/implies the truth of the facts, or
(c) knows he doesnt have basis that he states/implies in his assertion
2. Material [Rest. 2nd 162(2)]
If misrepresentation is likely to induce a reasonable person to agree to bargain, or
maker knows it was likely to induce the other party to agree even if reasonable
person would not have been induced
a. Barrer v. WNB when material misrepresentation can rescind K
Facts: Barrers home sold at tax sale but he got loan from WNB to
keep home. WNB notified by buyer of home that Barrer lied about
finances. Barrer did not reveal how much $ he owed in mortgages.
WNB wanted to void K.
Holding: Remanded for trial b/c issues of fact.
Rule: Innocent material misrepresentation of the facts can be
basis for rescission of contract. TEST: Recipient of
misrepresentation must demonstrate maker made assertion: (1) not
in accord with the facts, (2) material, (3) relied upon (4) justifiably
by the recipient (5) to his detriment.
III. DURESS & UNDUE INFLUENCE
A. Duress: forced or coerced (by threat or physical force) into making agreement
1. [Rest. 2nd 174] Duress by Physical Compulsion Prevents K Formation
If conduct to agree is physically compelled by duress, then manifestation of assent
is not effective.
2. [Rest. 2nd 175] Duress by Threat Makes K Voidable
(1) If assent is induced by improper threat that leaves party no reasonable
alternative, K is voidable by victim.
(2) If assent is induced by third party (not part of K formation), K voidable by
victim unless other party to K values or relies materially on K in good faith &
without reason to know of duress.
3. [Rest. 2nd 176] Threat is Improper
(1) Threat is improper if:
(a) threat is crime or tort
(b) criminal prosecution
(c) threat is of civil process and made in bad faith
(d) breach of good faith duty and fair dealing
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(2) Threat improper if resulting exchange not on fair terms, and [higher threshold]
(a) threat would harm recipient and not benefit party making threat
(b) effectiveness of threat induced by prior unfair dealing
(c) power for illegitimate ends
a. Holler v. Holler
Facts: Wife sues husband for making her sign premarital agreement in
order to remain the U.S. and stay with child. Wife is doesnt
understand language of agreement and not allowed attorney. Husband
knows of deportation deadline and that wife would lose child without
signing.
Holding: K voidable b/c made under duress.
Rules: 3 part TEST K made by 1) coercion, 2) lack of quality of
mind to form K, and 3) K resulted from defective state of mind.
B. Undue Influence
1. Rest. 2nd 177 Undue Influence Makes K Voidable
(1) unfair persuasion of a party who is under domination of the person exercising
persuasion or under trust that person will not act in manner inconsistent with his
welfare
(2) If partys assent induced by undue influence, K is voidable by victim.
(3) If assent induced by third party, K voidable unless other party in K relies
material on transaction in good faith and without reason to know of undue
influence.
a. Odorizzi v. Bloomfield School District
Facts: Odorizzi teacher charges with being gay. Resigns b/c
principle and super of school come to his home and persuade him
to immediately resign or else would publicize proceeding. Tell him
no time for attorney. K made when Odorozzi under emotional
strain. Was agreement to resign invalid?
Holding: K invalid b/c of undue influence, but not b/c fraud,
mistake of fact or duress used.
Rule: Short time, consequences of delay, no attorney, multiple
persuaders, inappropriate place for transaction all resulted in
[subjective] elements of overpersuasion and undue influence.
**UCC 1-103 ! allows the C/L Rest. re: defenses to K enforcement to apply to sale of goods**
IV. UNCONSCIONABILITY (shock the conscience)
A. Unconscionability can be procedural or substantive
1. Rest. 2nd 208: Unconscionable K or Term
If K or term is unconscionable at time K is made, court can refuse to enforce K
OR may enforce part of K without unconscionable term, or limit term to avoid
unconscionable results.
2. UCC 2-302: Unconscionable K or Clause
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Unless statute provides otherwise, natural person has capacity to incur voidable
contractual duties until beginning of day before persons 18th birthday.
a. Webster v. Sheridan
Facts: Webster entered into lease with Sheridan and Wilwerding
for apt. Both were minors, paid 2 months rent + deposit but could
not pay more and moved out. Webster demanded damages.
Sheridan claims no enforceable K.
Rule: Generally, K is voidable by infant party. Exception if
emancipated minor is liable for necessaries, i.e. things required
for maintenance of existence depending on social position and
situation of infant. If guardian/parent willing to supply
necessary, then infant not liable.
nd
2. Rest. 2 15: Mental Illness or Defect
(1) Person has voidable K duties if by reason of mental illness or defect
(a) unable to understand in reasonable manner the nature and consequences
of transaction, or
(b) unable to act in reasonable manner in relation to transaction and other
party has reason to know of condition.
(2) If K made on fair terms and other party unaware of persons mental illness or
defect, power of avoidance under (1) terminated to extent that K has been
performed in part or whole or circumstances changed making avoidance unjust.
a. Ortelere v. Teachers Retirement Board
Facts: Ortelere was mentally ill when signing K to receive all
benefits while alive and leaving nothing for husband. Retirement
committee knows of her illness when she signs.
Holding: K was voidable and husband receives benefits.
Rule: Traditional test 1) cognitive test: rational judgment/ability
to comprehend K, and 2) volitional test: unable to act reasonably
and reason to know of mental illness
3. Rest. 2nd 16: Intoxicated Persons
If party has reason to know that other party by reason of intoxication:
(a) unable to understand in reasonable manner the nature and consequences of
the transaction, or
(b) unable to act in a reasonable manner in relation to transaction.
VI. VIOLATION OF PUBLIC POLICY
A. K can be unenforceable if it violates public policy, or enforcement goes against
public interest
1. Rest. 2nd 178: Unenforceable Term on Grounds of Public Policy
(1) If legislation OR interests in enforcement are clearly outweighed by public
policy interests against enforcement.
(2) Factors weighing for enforcement of K:
(a) parties justified expectations,
(b) forfeiture of non-enforcement,
(c) special public interest in enforcement of term.
(3) Factors against enforcement of K:
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Goods for which payment has been made/accepted or have been
received/accepted
E. Examples
1. Owen v. Hendricks
Facts: Owen sues Hendricks to recover for real estate dealer commission.
Two letters written re: land, but only first letter was signed and second
letter didnt refer to first letter. Could 2 letter be taken together to
constitute a signed memorandum re: real estate commission?
Holding: No. S/F applied because land contract.
Rule: Any unsigned paper may be incorporated by reference in the paper
signed by the person sought to be charged. Here, Hendricks was sought to
be charged, but his letter was not signed and made no reference to
previous letter.
2. Crabtree v. Elizabeth Arden
Facts: Arden and Crabtree negotiate 2-year contract for Crabtree to begin
work as sales manager with yearly increase in salary. Ardens secretary
makes memo on telephone note re: terms of K, but no signature. Crabtree
not given negotiated raise. Comptroller signs payroll change, but not
approved by Arden. Arden denies existence of agreement and claims S/F
bars enforcement. Crabtree sues.
Holding: 3 writing satisfy S/F and agreement is enforceable.
Rule: K is for 2-year term, so falls within S/F. Memo can be more than 1
document as long as documents have sufficient connection and
expressly or by internal evidence refer to same subject-matter (Parol
evidence). Signature of party to be charged, i.e. Arden, satisfied by
signature of comptroller, VP, and secretary acting as agents of corp.
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(3) Where tender accepted the buyer must within a reasonable time notify seller of
any breach discovered and if the claim is for IP infringement, the buyer sued as a
result of breach must notify seller within reasonable time after he receives notice
of litigation.
(4) The burden is on the buyer to establish any breach.
! IF ACCEPT, BUYER CAN REVOKE ACCEPTANCE:
5. UCC 2-608: Revocation of Acceptance in Whole or Part
(1) Buyer can revoke acceptance of goods whose non-conformity substantially
impairs its value to him if he has accepted it
(a) on a reasonable assumption that its non-conformity would be cured
and it has not seasonably been cured; OR
(b) without discovery of defect, acceptance induced by difficulty to
discover defect before acceptance OR by the sellers assurance.
(2) Revocation must occur within reasonable time after buyer discovers defect
and BEFORE any substantial change in condition of the goods which is not
caused by their own defects. It is not effective until buyer notifies seller.
(3) Buyer has same rights and duties to goods as if he had rejected them.
IF REJECTED or ACCEPTANCE REVOKED, SELLER HAS RIGHT TO CURE:
6. UCC 2-508: Sellers Right to Cure
If tender is REJECTED, Seller can cure:
(1) Seller must have acted in good faith in order to be entitled to cure a nonconformity
(2) If time of performance has not yet expired, seller may seasonably notify the
buyer of his intention to cure and then make conforming delivery within K time.
(3) After K time expired, seller may have further reasonable time to make
conforming delivery IF seller reasonably believes the non-conforming goods
would be acceptable
B. Ex) Ramirez v. Autosport
Facts: Ramirezs create K with Autosport for trade in van. Autosport tenders a
non-conforming good and Ramirez rejects, asking Autosport to fix/cure the
problems (paint, hubcaps, wet cushions). Ramirez continued to notify seller
that goods were non-conforming. Autosport trades title without telling
Ramirez and Ramirezs ignore. Ramirezs reject and return the can.
Holding: Ramirezs had right to reject and cancel K, and awarded market
value of trade in van.
DAMAGES
I. REMEDY
A. General Rule: Monetary Damages ! Cost of Completion (i.e. cover)
1. GOAL: to put victim of breach in original position before K formed
B. Exception: If specific performance ! diminution of value (particularly when cost
of completion is an economic waste ! cost of replacement is grossly out of
proportion)
Ex) Jacob & Youngs v. Kent ! exception applied b/c substantial performance
occurred and cost of completion was grossly out of proportion
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II. MEASURE
A. General Rule: Expectation Damages
1. Assumes K and assumes performance
2. Gives value of performance to victim of breach ! benefit of the bargain
3. No windfall to Plaintiff If calculation of damages perform a windfall to P,
then Court will not award it ! causation is required b/w breach & damages
4. No penalty to D
B. Farnsworth Formula for Damages
(Direct Loss + Extra Loss) (Cost Avoided + Loss Avoided)
Direct Loss: difference between what is promised and received
Extra Loss: additional costs and losses caused by breach (including incidental
and consequential damages)
o Incidental damages: costs to clean up breach (i.e. handling defective
goods, reshipping, looking for substitute buyer, time negotiating
replacement contract for empoyee)
o Consequential damages: other losses arising from breach (i.e. lost
profits, lost customers, lost business volume, and downstream breaches);
where the $$ money $$ is
Costs Avoided: expenses avoided by victim of breach because performance
stopped early
Loss Avoided: losses victim of breach WOULD have suffered but was able to
prevent/avoid through MITIGATION
C. Exception: Reliance & Restitution
1. Reliance assumes no K and awards out of pocket value
2. Restitution assumes no K but ill-gotten gain by breaching party
III. LIMITS
A. Certainty: damage MUST be reasonably certain, but doesnt have to be exact; no
speculation permitted
B. Foreseeability: how foreseeable/remoteness of consequential damages
1. UCC 2-715: Consequential Damages
In contemplation of parties:
(a) they arise naturally in the ordinary course of events (happens all the time) OR
(b) special circumstances that parties had reason to know of at time of contracting
** Need to specifically say consequence will be harmful **
Ex) Hadley v. Baxendale
Facts: Mill Owner made agreement with Shipper to replace crank shaft for
mill to function. Shipper promised delivery next day, but delayed and mill
had to close. Mill suffered lost profits ! Could Mill recover for lost
profits?
Holding: No, lost profits were not foreseeable and mill owener didnt
communicate necessity of crank shaft for mill operation.
Rule: Consequential damages must arise naturally or be known to
breaching party at time of K.
Ex) Redgrave v. Boston Symphony ! Rule: K law can only award damages
related to K; no causal link between reputation damages and K breach
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C. Mitigation:
1. General Rule: duty to mitigate ! decrease damages to extent possible
2. Exception: (1) No duty to mitigate if the goods are non-fungible (i.e. unique
good that cant be substituted), or (2) No duty to for employee to mitigate by
taking a different/inferior job (re: employment contracts)
Ex) Parker v. 20th Century
D. Cost of Completion v. Diminution in Value
General Rule: Cost of completion is awarded
! Exception: When there is substantial performance, diminutions of value
is awarded
KEY EXAM TIPS CHECK LIST
1) Is there a K formed?
!O+A+C
! If no C, can promise be binding w/o C? (i.e. promissory estoppel)
2) If K, what are terms?
! Battle of the Forms (does acceptance vary from offer)
3) If K, is it enforceable?
! Statute of Frauds applicable and/or is satisfied? (need to be in writing?)
- Do exceptions to S/F apply?
4) Do any defenses bar enforcement?
! Mistake, Misrepresentation, Unconscionability
5) Has K been breached?
! Have the terms been breached?
- Substantial or Material (C/L)?
! Is there outside evidence to help argue breach -- PE Rule
- Multiple documents (collateral agreements)?
- Prior oral agreements?
- Integration/Merger clause?
- Warranty disclaimer?
6) Damages
! Expectation damages?
! Duty to mitigate?
! Consequential damages foreseeable?
Statute of Fraud Questions
If ORAL AGREEMENT ! Does it fit within S/F? If YES, then should be in writing.
Land K Provision: applies to sale of realty AND transfer of interest in land (i.e.
leasehold interests)
o Written land K ! Document needs to include price = essential term and
omission of term violates S/F.
o Exception for part-performance & detrimental reliance: if one party
detrimentally relies on oral agreement in way that is unequivocally referable to
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the agreement (i.e. conduct that wouldnt occur had oral K not existed), then
agreement doesnt need to be written
One-year provision: make sure that it is IMPOSSIBLE for K to be fully performed
within one year of the time it was made
o Lifetime employment & indefinite promises: if employee has possibility of
dying within a year, then K doesnt fall within one-year provision
Sale of goods
o $500: written K is required when agreement if for sale of goods of $500 or more
o Modification: if there is an oral modification of a written K for sale of goods,
calculate the total value of the K as modified to see if it meets $500 or more
o Exceptions to S/F:
" If buyer accepts goods (i.e. receives, inspects, and keeps) or pays for
goods, buyer cant assert S/F
" If there is admission that K was made, S/F cannot apply in UCC
" Written confirmation b/w merchants of oral agreement can satisfy S/F to
enforce K against party who sent written confirmation if it contains
essential terms
Memorandum Requirements
o Signature: can be stamped or typewritten; doesnt need to be handwritten; only
needs to be an intent to authenticate the document
o Unsigned documents: if there is an absence of signature on one document, see if
there are other signed documents that refer to same transaction
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