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Contents of Contract - Law of Contract - Lecture Slides, Slides of Contract Law

Contents of Contract, Composition of a Contract, Terms of the Contract, Rights and Duties, Types of Terms, Express Terms, Written Terms, Illegal Contracts, Communicate Terms, Exclusionary Clauses are some points from this lecture. This lecture is part of lecture series on Law of Contract course. I have full series of lectures on this subject. I am sharing this with my friends on docsity. Enjoy.

Typology: Slides

2011/2012

Uploaded on 12/31/2012

dhirendra
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Download Contents of Contract - Law of Contract - Lecture Slides and more Slides Contract Law in PDF only on Docsity! Contents of the contract • Composition of a contract • Most important provisions: terms of the contract • Role of the terms of a contract • Provisions that are not terms e.g place of conclusion Importance of knowing terms of the contract • Awareness of rights and duties • Situations where parties do not know full terms: form of express terms implied terms Docsity.com Contents of the contract • Express terms • Implied terms: read into the contract even though the contract is silent on the point Example: pp 88-89> express and implied terms and non- terms Types of terms (i) Express terms • Written terms or stated out loud  Problems with signed contracts (awareness of the terms) reference to terms in another document (standard form contracts) Docsity.com Contents of the contract • Exclusionary clauses usually exempt service providers from liability for any damage negligently caused by the service provider or its employees awareness of consumers of such clauses  How can consumers be bound by terms they are not aware of their existence? actual knowledge of a term not a prerequisite for it to be binding NB: Service provider must show that it did everything that was reasonably possible to bring the term/s to the consumer‟s attention Docsity.com Contents of the contract • Exclusionary clauses (CNTND) Factors to be taken into account in determining reasonability: the point in time that the consumer could potentially have first become aware of the terms the position and prominence of the notice the size and prominence of the writing on the ticket and or notice NB Central South African Railways v McLaren 1903 p 92 NB Durban’s Water Wonderland (Pty) v Botha 1999 Docsity.com Contents of the contract Implied terms Kinds of implied terms: law on the facts trade usage • Terms implied by law automatically form part of the contract in the absence of agreement to the contrary E.g: >payment of purchase price in the law of sale > contract of lease: lessee to pay rent in arrear often changed by express agreement not all types of contracts have automatic rules Docsity.com Contents of the contract • Terms implied by trade usage similar to custom or terms implied by law customs of particular trades or industries may give rise to binding terms that automatically form part of every contract entered by members of a particular trade or industry ignorance of trade usage not an excuse Coutts v Jacobs p 96 (payment of commission for unsold wool) trade usage to meet requirements similar to those of custom: „notorious, certain, and reasonable and not contrary to positive law‟ Docsity.com Contents of the contract • Common contractual provisions conditions time terms warranties exclusion or exemption clauses cancellation clauses penalty clauses no variation clause Docsity.com Contents of the contract Conditions • A provision in a contract which makes the operation or continued operation of a contract or part of dependent on the happening of an uncertain future event • Strictly speaking not a term because it does not impose a positive obligation • Suspends one party‟s obligation as required by a term pending the happening of uncertain event e.g sale of immovable property subject to obtaining a bond • Other party obliged to perform once condition is fulfilled (suspensive condition) • Failure of the condition = nullity of the contract • Prevention of fulfilment of the condition: doctrine of fictional fulfilment Docsity.com Contents of the contract Warranties • Terms in which one party expressly confirms the truthfulness of a particular fact • Party confirming warrants the truth of fact e.g when the seller confirms top speed of the car • False warranties: breach of contract • False fact stated as part of pre-contractual negotiations: sue under misrepresentation • Difference between warranty and misrep misrep is made before the contract and warranty forms part of the contract Docsity.com Contents of the contract Warranties • Difficulty in determining whether the statement was made before the contract or is a term • Written contracts: usually have a clause stipulating that only the written document constitute the entire contract • Situations where contract is partly or wholly verbal NB Petit v Abrahamson 1946 (age of horses) Docsity.com Contents of the contract Cancellation clauses • Entitles a party to cancel a contract in the event that the other party commits a breach of contract or particular type of breach • Absence of the clause: a party can only cancel if one party committed a material or fundamental breach e.g contract of lease • No obligation to cancel but a right to do so Docsity.com Contents of the contract No-variation clauses • Frequently included in written contracts • Variation only to have force and effect if agreed and reduced to writing by parties • Their purpose: certainty and prevention of conflicts about the actual terms of the contract • This is in light of the fact that contracts may be partly written and party verbal • Absence of “no-variation clause” Docsity.com Contents of the contract Disagreements over actual terms of the contract • Parties sometimes disagree on the terms or the meaning of terms of the contract • May happen because the terms may be unclear or ambiguous or because they don‟t accurately reflect the parties prior negotiations • Legal principles developed to assist in resolving disputes The parol (oral) evidence rule • Does not allow presentation of oral evidence where parties have reduced their contract to writing Docsity.com Contents of the contract Disagreements over actual terms of the contract The parol (oral) evidence rule (CNTND) • Exceptions to the rule where parties have entered into a contract that is partly verbal and partly written  Oral evidence may be presented as to the oral terms  Oral evidence not to relate to the written terms where written terms are vague, incomplete or ambiguous > Oral evidence may be presented to clarify the parties intended meaning Docsity.com
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