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

Contents of the Contract, Intermediate Terms, Conditions and Warranties, Important Term, Contrasting Cases, Sale of Goods, Innominate Terms, Terms of the Contract, Express Terms in Contracts, Parol Evidence Rule 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.

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2011/2012

Uploaded on 12/31/2012

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Download Contents of the Contract - Law of Contract - Lecture Slides and more Slides Contract Law in PDF only on Docsity! Contents of the contract ā€“ Terms Terms of the contract are generally thought of in one of 3 categories: i. Conditions ii. Warranties iii. Innominate or intermediate terms Docsity.com Conditions and warranties A condition ā€“ is a term that is regarded as being FUNDAMENTAL to the contract because it goes to the ā€˜rootā€™ of the contract. A warranty ā€“ is a less important term of the contract Docsity.com Innominate terms The ā€˜innominateā€™ term ā€“ did not come into being until 1962 in the case of Hong Kong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd 1962. Docsity.com Terms of the contract A term in a contract may be held to be in the contract either because: ā€¢ - it was put there EXPRESSLY by the parties or - it has been IMPLIED into the contract by various methods Docsity.com Express terms in contracts For WRITTEN contracts there are various things to consider. i. the Parol Evidence rule ii. whether a pre-contractual statement can be regarded as a term iii. signed written documents iv. whether terms written in various documents can be v. incorporated as terms of the final contract, and finally vi. whether terms have been incorporated into the contract by virtue of a consistent course of dealing over time Docsity.com Lā€™Estrange v Graucob 1934 If one or more pre-contractual statements are regarded by the court as part of the final contract, because they display an element of futurity and so are seen to embody a promise, then they are regarded as express terms. Docsity.com Lā€™Estrange v Graucob 1934 The plaintiff had bought a cigarette vending machine from the defendant. She signed an order form which contained a broad exemption clause in very small print. The machine did not work and she brought an action for breach of an implied warranty in the contract that the machine was fit for the purpose it had been sold for. The court found for the defendants on the basis that she had actually signed the contract containing the exemption clause and so it was her fault if she had not read it. Docsity.com Curtis v Chemical Cleaning and Dyeing Co Ltd 1951 When the dress was returned with a stain on it the plaintiff sued the company who tried to rely on an exemption clause. It was held the exemption clause only applied as regards the beads and sequins and not as regards stains because of the misrepresentation to the plaintiff that only liability re beads and sequins was excluded. Docsity.com Incorporation of written terms Three key points here seem to be: Firstly, the timing of when the document is brought to the attention of the other party Secondly, the nature of the document ā€“ as we saw in the Grogan case, some documents, such as timesheets, invoices etc, usually only evidence the administration of the contract without becoming ā€˜partā€™ of it Thirdly, whether or not the other party was given ā€˜reasonable noticeā€™ of the terms alleged to be in the contract Docsity.com Incorporated or not? The timing of when the document is brought to the attention of the other party, an interesting case is: Olley v Marlborough Court Ltd 1949 Docsity.com Incorporated or not? Nature of the document We have already looked at the Grogan case to help with the nature of the document and noticed that some documents are merely part of the ā€˜administeringā€™ of the contract. Chapelton v Barry UDC 1940 demonstrates the nature of the document and the timing of notice. Docsity.com Cases not involving exclusion clauses An interesting case is Interfoto Picture Library Ltd v Stiletto Visual Programmes Ltd 1989 Docsity.com Consistent course of dealing and common knowledge When the two parties deal with each other regularly on standard terms and conditions, then so long as they have dealt ā€˜consistentlyā€™ previously, the terms and conditions will become part of the contract between them if on the one occasion they omit to use the standard form. See McCutcheon v David MacBrayne Ltd 1964 Docsity.com Update September 2008 Judges have made use of the rules of whether or not a written term has been incorporated into a contract as a method of controlling the number of unfair terms in a contract. These rules would be unnecessary if judges had the power to exclude unreasonable terms generally in the contract besides the exclusion of unreasonable exclusion clauses. Docsity.com
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