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[edit] Common Law and Civil LawHi all, just a suggestion regarding Common Law and Civil Law... I realise that there is a note at the top of the page stating that this article is primarily involved with common law, however numerous edits have been made referring to civil law in amongst common law contract rules. Of course both are relevant, but I think to the layman reader it may be difficult to differentiate between the two. International commercial contracts are often written on the basis of Common Law contract models. Not only are they written in the English language, they frequently also adopt the Common Law legal terminology and legal structure. While I believe civil law is very relevant, it might be beneficial to separate information for common law and civil law so as not to confuse readers. The vast majority of information on this page refers to common law rules, and in fact the actual method of sourcing the information here has been done by referring to cases which is in keeping with the actual method of authority for the common law system. Common law refers to past case 'ratio decidendi' (judge-made binding decisions, in fact meaning 'the reason for deciding' in latin) to establish rules of law, whereas in Civil law the judiciary must apply a pre-existing set of rules to cases. Anyway, just my two cents :) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 123.2.184.152 (talk) 07:52, 7 September 2008 (UTC) [edit] Offer and Acceptance/Unilateral Contract queryI think the definition of a unilateral contract is wrong - the bit about the offer being open to the whole world, basically. Black's concurs with me, but I thought I'd throw it out to the discussion page rather than just change the article, because I'm not really all that good at contracts (hence my referring to the wikipedia page ;). If you're not that good at contracts why on earth would you even consider editing this page? lol omg... See Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Company. A unilateral agreement is one where the promisor has made an offer to any party, with a stipulation of what is required to accept the offer. To accept that offer the promisee must intentionally fulfil the stipulated requirements. To thee must be an agreement between each for thee contract. Eionm 09:06, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
There references to Black's Law Dictionary as though Black's (not racist) were regarded as authoritative is very telling. It is also challenging to distinguish between British and American posters, but this much is clear: Black's is not authoritative in the United States. It's handy to have around if your command of Latin and Norman French makes it hard to decipher old, hoary legal texts, but then, in the US, we rarely have cause to examine texts that are more than ten years old. If you wish to be taken seriously, you need to purge the references to Black's as having any authority in the 21st Century.Cybersharque (talk) 19:52, 2 August 2009 (UTC) [edit] Added generalize tagI've added a generalize tag because this is a fucking article seems overly focused on the legal aspects of contract (rather than, say, the social, economic, or historical aspects - contracts aren't merely legal). This was discussed a bit above, but I don't think my concerns have really been dealt with (and I don't know enough about those other aspects to be able to address them myself). Elliotreed 05:40, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
doesn't mention the first meaning, but I think it's is important to mention in a general contract article that not all contracts are legally enforceable contracts. Can someone check the 1911 encyclopedia on this? If someone delivers produce locally on a regular schedule to customers who expect delivery from him, but they have no formal legal contract for delivery, what would you call that agreement? --SueHay 02:03, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
The thing I was trying to get at was that contracts are a legal topic, but I think an encyclopedia article about a legal topic doesn't need to cover only the specifically legal aspects - that is, the current state of the doctrine. I think it should take a more interdisciplinary approach. For example, more about the history of the contract would be good. (What do sociologists have to say about the process in which contracts are negotiated?) Elliotreed 02:13, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] ALL CAPS in contractsWhy do many contracts use all caps for some words? Like: "NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the AGREEMENT..." Is there a legal purpose to this? Keep in mind I'm not asking about entire clauses written in uppercase, just single words, scattered throughout the document. — Eric Herboso 05:01, 22 April 2007 (UTC)
J. Spurling Ltd v. Bradshaw predates Thornton by some years. The term sought to be incorporated in Thornton excluded liability for personal injury, which today would be an illegal clause in England under s.2(1) Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977. It has been suggested that signature might need to be supplemented by special notice in cases of "particularly onerous or unusual terms": Ocean Chemical Transport Inc v. Exnor Craggs Ltd [2000] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 446 at 454. The law could do with judicial clarification on this point, but the Ocean Chemical suggestion would, I think, be a good road for the law to go down. Signature will not bind where the document is not one in which one would expect to find contractual terms, for example in Grogan v. Robin Meredith Plant Hire (The Times, 20 Feb. 1996) a weekly timesheet signed by a person who hired a machine and driver, apparently intending to show what hours were worked, had contractual terms printed on the back - signature was found to be insufficient to incorporate the printed terms so as to vary the earlier oral hire contract.79.69.129.158 (talk) 16:56, 14 March 2009 (UTC) Actually you can be charged with disluding the offeree if you don't put certain words in Caps. This is supposed to make it fair for everyone including the "common person". That's why in some counties (not countries) the use of legalese is banned because it causes too much difficulties for the "common person" to understand. This unsigned bit above about being charged with "disluding the offeree" is not true. The real reason, I believe, is that contracts were once written in continuous blocks, typically in a deed poll (cut straight between two copies on one piece of writing material) or an indenture (cut jaggedly). Since clauses were not in separate paragraphs, and there were no headings, etc, the use of capitals indicated the start of a clause and generally allowed rapid identification of the sort of clause it was, so WHEREAS indicates a recital, NOW IT IS HEREBY AGREED tells you the proper stuff is about to begin, and so on.79.77.226.101 (talk) 17:28, 12 February 2009 (UTC) [edit] Carbolic Smoke BallThis is really small detail, but the article says that the ball was supposed to cure the flu, when in fact it was supposed to prevent someone from getting the flu if they used it correctly. A woman used it and got the flu. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.249.72.239 (talk) 00:01, 6 December 2008 (UTC) [edit] TermsWould anybody object if I were to move (and elaborate upon) the "terms" section to a new article entitled "Contract Term" or "Term (law)", then change the section on the "contract" page to a mere summary with a main article link. Bamkin 16:21, 27 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] SigningWhen a person signs a contract do they have to sign it with their dominant hand? If so, then where is it in the article?--71.234.101.173 21:03, 29 May 2007 (UTC)
When sigining a contract, they don't have to sign it with their dominant hand just any hand, they just need to know what the contract says or mean to say. I know some cases where people lied to other people but in most common law countries, you can actually type into a contract and it's valid. Like how I sign checks off to people but I use a computer for mass production and according to US law it's valid. I don't really know about other counties... 9/4/08 In terms of Australia and the United Kingdom, it is actually not relevant how a person signs the contract. It is their intent to enter into binding contractual relations that makes the contract enforceable against them. The signature of course needs to be identifiable in order to prove that the person signed the contract after the fact, however witnesses attesting to the person signing the contract would be sufficient regardless of whether the signature is legible. If both parties are Consensus Ad Idem (meeting of the minds) and both intend to enter into contract, both have consideration, legal capacity and have met the relevant formalities then the contract is binding. [edit] ClassThis is assessed as a B, but someone might want to nominate it for GA. Aboutmovies 00:54, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Bilateral v. unilateral contracts [section removed]The following section was excised from the page, but I think it should be put back in: (I agree and I put it back in, it's very relevant) Contracts may be bilateral or unilateral. The more common of the two, a bilateral contract, is an agreement in which each of the parties to the contract makes a promise or promises to the other party. For example, in a contract for the sale of a home, the buyer promises to pay the seller $200,000 in exchange for the seller's promise to deliver title to the property. In a unilateral contract, only one party to the contract makes a promise. A typical example is the reward contract: A promises to pay a reward to B if B finds A's dog. B is not obliged to find A's dog, but A is obliged to pay the reward to B if B finds the dog. In this example, the finding of the dog is a condition precedent to A's obligation to pay. An offer of a unilateral contract may often be made to many people (or 'to the world') by means of an advertisement. In that situation, acceptance will only occur on satisfaction of the condition (such as the finding of the offeror's dog). If the condition is something that only one party can perform, both the offeror and offeree are protected — the offeror is protected because he will only ever be contractually obliged to one of the many offerees; and the offeree is protected, because if she does perform the condition, the offeror will be contractually obliged to pay her. In unilateral contracts, the requirement that acceptance be communicated to the offeror is waived. The offeree accepts by performing the condition, and the offeree's performance is also treated as the price, or consideration, for the offeror's promise. The most common type of unilateral contract is the insurance contract. The insurance company promises to pay the insured a stated amount of money on the happening of an event if the insured pays premiums; note that the insured does not make any promise to pay the premiums. Courts generally favor bilateral contracts. The general rule in the United States is: "In case of doubt, an offer is interpreted as inviting the offeree to accept either by promising to perform what the offer requests or by rendering the performance, as the offeree chooses." Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 32 (1981) (emphasis added). Here the law attempts to provide some protection from the risk of revocation in a unilateral contract to the offeree. Note that if the offer specifically requests performance rather than a promise, a unilateral contract will exist. See option contracts for more information on protection given to the offeree in a unilateral contract. --Eastlaw 07:58, 14 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Contractual holdupI have located information on an early case that is used to establish precedence regarding contractual holdup practices, and I wanted to make anyone interested in this article aware of it. See Baker v. Morton, an 1870 SCOTUS trial, and Omaha Claim Club. The citation is [1]. – Freechild (BoomCha) 06:17, 15 July 2007 (UTC) [edit] law of contractwhat is the deferrence between agreement and contract? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.199.17.19 (talk) 09:34, 4 March 2008 (UTC) I assume what the previous contributor meant to ask is: What is the difference between an agreement and a contract? I'd agree that there should be a paragraph on or some mention of that. That is particularly important because "agreement" only has an disambiguation link leading here. There seems to be some distinction between the two. Could one of the experts kindly attend to this question. Thks. Lisa4edit —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.236.23.111 (talk) 08:15, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] removed photoI have removed the handshake photo. It is meant to be a representation of two people 'shaking hands' to formalise an agreement, but is actually a person being congratulated on becoming a police officer. It is inappropriate. --Adam Brink (talk) 14:17, 29 August 2008 (UTC) kw-012© since 9-2007 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 212.203.4.38 (talk) 11:32, 10 February 2009 (UTC) [edit] Do we need to reform this page?I see a lot complaints on this page, and it's pretty clear that the article is difficult to comprehend, whether for a reader or an editor. Would we be better off with a page for contract that gave a little introduction to its place in the law of obligations, and some introductory material to the sociological and economic aspects, then had different pages for the law of contract in various categories of jurisdiction (commonwealth, US, civil, islamic, etc), and sub-topics in those areas if necessary, and links to the main pages for e.g. economic theory of contracts? Lawdroid (talk) 11:29, 3 May 2009 (UTC)
[edit] Trade Usage, Course of Performance, & Course of DealingAre Trade Usage, Course of Performance, Course of Dealing mentioned anywhere in the Contracts article??? They are MAJOR areas of contract interpretation, and I could not find a mention of them anywhere in the Contracts section of wikipedia. They warrant their own section in the contracts article. [edit] The Natural Right to ContractThe opening definition assumes that contracts can only take place in the presence of a governmental authority. This is patently false. Contracts exist prior to government. Two mobsters can sign a contract as easily as two people on a desert island as easily as a military supplier. The article ignores the very real question of whether the contracting parties are engaged in legal activities The ability to make contracts comes from freedom of action and freedom of will. The enforceability aspect is peculiar to legally binding contracts. Change definition or, alternatively, rename this article Contract (legal) Mrdthree (talk) 12:45, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
MRDTHREE has it wrong. The hitman does not have a "contract" in the sense under discussion in this article. In law, the hitman has a conspiracy. Which reminds me that the definition of contract in the text is incomplete. It does not include the requirement of lawful object. An agreement to perform an unlawful act offends public policy and for that reason is not a contract, because the courts will not enforce it. No enforcement, no contract, that's the law. And this is true on both sides of the pond. (I practice in both New York and the Courts of England and Wales, and the definition of contract is the same in both places.) MRDTHREE is making stuff up as he goes and really has nothing important to share with us. What Lawdroid says is important, and I listen to his words. What MRDTHREE says is unimportant, and I do not hear his words. <Credit to D.C. Fontana as author of the script for the "Friday's Child" episode of Star Trek TOS>Cybersharque (talk) 20:03, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
[edit] GlobalizationThis article has some serious structural biases. The jurisdiction appears to be the UK, since the bulk of the cases cited are British. Unusually, even the U.S. perspective appears to be underrepresented. Discussions of non-Anglophone common law jurisdictions (e.g., India) are almost entirely absent. The same goes for the civil law and other legal systems, which are barely mentioned. Accordingly, I've added a globalize template and will add this article to the open tasks list for WP:BIAS. I am also concerned about the bias of the structure of the article, which is organized based on concepts from the common law of contracts, which may not apply in other legal systems. As a result, it may be very difficult to incorporate other legal systems' perspectives into the article. I am not sure what to do about this, short of a complete rewrite of the article (which I am not inclined to do and I doubt anyone else is either). Elliotreed (talk) 04:49, 30 September 2009 (UTC)
[edit] The public contractsThe public contracts are the referring to the territorial contractation, about public employ. The big, old and new economy, are alone, with the territorial or decentrated contracts. There are the ceremonies about the working syndacates, because are the wealth of information on the rate of increase and economic development, so as the crisis. The crisis is despised by social organizations, that provide the annual document on anti disoccupation and anti recession intervents and deliveries. Suddenly, the sectors are informed on strategy, and the collective contracts are conduced by a form of assistentialism, named "welfare". Welfare is the social - previdence, that laugh about the development-centres , which are expensive in questioning on the reddit -surface, and on the credit as a lay. The public agreement on contracts is named "signature of the collective contract" ; the contract "was signed by the representants of Policy and Syndacates": this action is the past conclusion of accord on importance and public decor. Is the allusion of the time that make the idea of the public job. The public job, is founded on the right to carrier, and on the concourse. Is a time-work,because the clock, is observed on type of share, remainding to the collectives's. The contract is signed by the parts on accord by two persons. So, the amministrative right is respected by the form based on assumption on work, and of the previdential practices, that carry on the occupational economy. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.22.230.104 (talk) 21:19, 19 November 2009 (UTC) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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