1 / 11

Consideration

Consideration. Chapter 8. What is Consideration?. Consideration – what a person demands and generally must receive in order to make his or her promise legally binding. Car Dealership – money or financing Purchaser – the car. 3 Requirements of Consideration.

jag
Télécharger la présentation

Consideration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Consideration Chapter 8

  2. What is Consideration? • Consideration – what a person demands and generally must receive in order to make his or her promise legally binding. • Car Dealership – money or financing • Purchaser – the car

  3. 3 Requirements of Consideration • Each party must make a promise, perform an act, or prevent from doing something • Each party’s promise, act, or forbearance must be in exchange for a return promise, act, or forbearance from the other party • What each party is exchanging must have legal value – worth something in the eyes of the law

  4. Contractual Promise vs. Gift • Consideration differentiates the two: • A gift is a transfer of ownership without receiving a return • A promise to make a gift is usually not legally binding • A donor (person giving a gift)intentionally transfers the gift to the donee (person receiving the gift) • When the donee accepts the gift, the transaction becomes legally binding

  5. Promise, Act, or Forbearance • When looking for consideration, look for LEGAL VALUE in the act that is promised. • If someone promises forbearance (not to do something), look beneath the promise and ask if the forbearance has legal value.

  6. Legal Value • Legal Value – means there has been a change in a party’s legal position as a result of the contract. Exchange of 2 benefits. • Examples: • Feed my dog and I’ll pay you $100 • Mom tells you if you don’t have a Sweet 16 party, she’ll buy you a car at 17 • You tell your neighbor you will refrain from buying a dog, if she refrains from building a fence

  7. Analyze & Discuss • Jose was talking to his brother about the upcoming graduation of his nephew Kyle. Jose mentioned he was thinking about buying Kyle a motorcycle as a graduation present. Benton’s brother, concerned about the safety of owning a motorcycle, offered Jose $1000 not to do so. Jose, who did not have the money to buy the motorcycle at the present time, accepted. Is there consideration for the brother’s promise to pay $1000. If so, what is it?

  8. Section 2 Questionable consideration

  9. Circumstantial Consideration • Certain forms of consideration are only legally binding in the proper circumstances. • Illusory Promises – a promise must create a duty or impose an obligation to be legally binding. If a contract creates an escape, it is illusionary. • Termination Clauses – businesses often want the power to withdraw • Termination Clause must be included in original contract • Output Contracts – when a buyer agrees to buy ALL of a product • Requirements Contracts – when a seller may agree to supply ALL of the needs for a particular buyer

  10. Circumstantial Consideration • Certain forms of consideration are only legally binding in the proper circumstances. • Existing Duty – when a person promises to do something that they are already obligated to do by law. These CANNOT serve as consideration. • Existing Public Duty – public servants (police, fire, etc.) are expected to serve the public on and off duty • Existing Private Duty – a persona cannot demand additional compensation for carrying out a contract. • Settlement of Liquidated Debts – when a creditor agrees to accept a lesser amount of a debt, they cannot demand more. • Settlement of Unliquidated Debts – when there is a dispute about how much is owed. The agreed amount becomes the new binding amount. • Release- when a tort occurs, financial pressure the injured party will agree to release liability • Composition with Creditors – creditors will agree to accept less if the debtor agrees to not file bankruptcy.

  11. False Consideration • Some acts or promises are falsely identified as consideration, but NEVER CAN BE • Mutual Gifts • Past Consideration – an act, promise, or forbearance that has already taken place cannot serve as consideration.

More Related