Contracts II - Stone - Final Outline
Contracts II - Stone - Final Outline
Contracts II - Stone - Final Outline
3
Economic analysis of Konic v. Peerless
o Opposite of the economic view!
o Each party should look out for his own self-interest and make sure that he is precise.
The party with the most to lose should bear the burden of being precise.
o The buyer should internalize the cot because he has the most to lose. It is his own fault
because he should have been clear.
London County Council v. Henry Boot & Sons - Contract contained “escalator clause”
under which the London County Council would increase its payments to the plaintiffs,
building contractors, in the event of increases in the “rates of wages” paid by them. The
London County Council made it clear that they did not regard holiday credits as coming
within the escalator clause; but the builders’ association took a different view. Neither side
inserted any words in the contract so as to clear up the difference between them. In case of
difference as to the meaning of those terms, it was for the court to determine it.
Hypo: X and Y are drinking together and X says I will sell you my place for $50k. Y says sure
and X gets his wife to get some paper and Y gives up $5k for deposit. X says “Wait a minute, I
was only kidding. I can’t sell you my place for that.” Y sues for performance. What result?
Argue Y and N.
Yes Y gets farm: A RPP would see intent within the conduct of X and his wife. The
conduct would trump any subjective intent on part of X. If wife really does sign the K then
that only supports Y’s position. (Objective)
No X was only kidding. His drinking got the best of him and there was no “meeting of
the minds” to bargain. What about X’s drunkenness? See Farnsworth (incapacity) also
Rest. §15 (Subjective)
If the offer had been for $50 instead of $50k then the facts would lead toward X b/c no
RPP would expect to pay that for a farm and this would be considered “frolic and banter”
o Court’s Interpretation of Ambiguous Terms
Naturally follows from ambiguity b/c court has to interpret terms if they are not clear and court
wants to save the K.
Two lines of cases found in issues of interpretation
Mutual ambiguity = No K
Lower cost provider clears up ambiguity or suffers the consequences
o Creates incentives for future situations of ambiguity
o Lower transactions are a better option so that economy can succeed w/ more
transaction
Determining Meaning of Ambiguous Terms
Four Step Test Method of Inquiry
o Clear K terms may be present if they are there follow them, they may establish
the relevant intent. (THIS IS THE GOAL OF THE LAWYER)
o General meaning of words
o Special meaning of words IF the parties assign special meaning to a term (i.e.
previous dealings), then that meaning will prevail over the meaning used in the rest of
the world.
o Industry custom or trade usage knew or should have known
Restatement §202 (Step by Step analysis) (On EXAM: do not assume a meaning, cite law
and argue which should be the proper interpretation)
o Words and conduct should be interpreted in light of the circumstances
o Writing should be interpreted as a whole
o Unless a different meaning is attached:
4
General meaning prevails
Technical terms are given their technical meaning when used in a transaction in
their technical field
o Any course of performance accepted without objection
o Any course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade.
Determining Which Party’s Meaning Prevails (Restatement § 201)
If attached, the language of that attachment prevails
If different meanings are attached, one party’s meaning will prevail if:
o That party did not know of any other meaning attached by the other party and the other
party knew of the meaning attached by the first party. (One party knows of the other’s
attached meaning)
o That party had no reason to know of any different meaning attached by the other party
and the other party had reason to know the meaning attached by the first party.
Weight of Evidence in Interpretation (Restatement § 203)
Hierarchy of Terms
o Reasonable, lawful, and effective meaning > unreasonable, unlawful, or of no effect
o Express terms > course of performance > course of dealing > usage of trade
o Specific terms and exact terms > general language
o Separately negotiated or added terms > standardized terms or other terms not
separately negotiated
Application Hypo: A goes into B’s office worrying about renewal of employment K. B is
looking at papers. A asked for 10 % raise and 6-mos. extension. B is looking down at board
of directors’ report. B says yes to 6-mos., but what secretly meant was a reaction to board of
directors’ report that addressed a 6-mos. term. Next day B fires A (like Embry case). What
word focusing on that might be ambiguous? YES Does A have K?
Yes: Use test #2 under 203 to say that Yes means Yes (i.e. Yes is not ambiguous) and any
RPP would have thought the same thing as Alice.
No: She “should have known” that he didn’t mean yes b/c his full attn. was not w/ her and
a special meaning was attached to his answer in the affirmative.
What should she do – sue or walk away?
o Think about how this will affect her opportunities for future employment, she has other
options as she could re-negotiate again or go elsewhere. Think about mitigation, she
may have to try something rather than sit on the couch and eat pringles. (§350)
o She’s also got proof problems b/c this is a he said, she said case. Also whistle blowers
don’t usually get a second chance to blow.
Gap-Filling by the Court (Restatement § 204)
o At common law, requirements for forming a contract were much stricter
Names of parties
Description of subject matter
Time for performance
Price
o When all elements of a contract are met (especially intent) except a provision here and there, the
court can fill in the missing parts Courts often fill in minor terms as a default rules
Only about matters on which both parties are silent!
o Whose K is it anyway?
o When too many terms are omitted, the probability is low that a contract is intended Do we have
enough within the four corners of the contract to provide a key for the court?
o Courts do gap filling w/ terms w/ respect to:
5
When (i.e. sale of a car)
Warranties?
Possibility of Recission?
Payment method?
Delivery?
o May use business custom/trade usage to fill gaps
o DANGER – court may fill so many gaps that they effectively rewrite the K and interfere w/
private property rights and the transfer thereof (Whose K is it anyway?) BUT, if we don’t, no
transaction occurs, which shrinks the economic pie
Case Application – Interpretation of Ambiguous Terms & Gap-Filling
o Frigaliment Importing Co (“The Chicken Case”) – This is a burden of proof case, the two parties
each understood “chicken” to be a different thing, the P thought “young and tender” and D thought
“any old chicken.”
This isn’t a mutual ambiguity case (Peerless/Konic)
Court follows the economic analysis, i.e. P has the burden of proof b/c he has more incentive
to be clear
Use 4-part test above to clear up ambiguity instead of blowing up the K, and put the burden on
the one who has the most to lose
o US Naval Case Institute v. Charter Communications – The U.S. Naval Institute published the
hardback bestseller, “The Hunt for Red October” in October of 1984. It granted a license to D to
publish the paperback version, and the K stipulation that it could not be published sooner than
October of 1985. Relying on common industry practice, D began filling orders and shipping
books in preparation for the official October 1985 publication.
Trade usage prevails
Although P says it’s ignorant of trade usage must follow the “should have known” test
(compare to Hawkins case)
Trade usage held regardless of knowledge, book case follows a different direction than chicken
case.
o Action Ads Case—P had an employee K w/ D that had a term stating that 60 days after P’s hiring,
D would provide a medical insurance program. P was injured on the job after 60 days, but no
insurance was provided.
NO gap filling
Court refuses to supply the terms b/c there are just too many to supply. K was indefinite and
ambiguous and b/c P had the most incentive to secure his rights he should’ve checked into the
plan.
P didn’t provide any proof of what the coverage would have been “Devil in the Details”
Wants court to find a “standard” insurance K.
What if faced w/ UCC 2-204(3)? Allows for gap-fillers if intent to K is there; minor terms can
be supplied by court
Case also addresses §33 Certainty
o Oglebay v. Norton – K called for a price to be set by a trade journal, the journal stops publication
so is the K destroyed? NO, go to mkt. price to determine what is right.
Gap-fillers are about substance, not form – i.e. just b/c magazine (form) stopped publishing
didn’t mean that court couldn’t go to a secondary source to get the substance.
court gap-fills by supplying a “reasonable price”
o Southworth v. Oliver - ???? Facts??
Court uses parole evidence to fill Gaps
If there is no valid offer, acceptance doesn’t matter!
“Agreement to Agree”
o What is an “Agreement to Agree”?
6
1st stage = K or Prelim. Negotiations OR
2nd stage = Memorial to a K entered into or has the K itself come into existence.
o It is always possible to argue yes/argue no on presence of K at Stage 1
o If you just have “an agreement to agree,” NO intent to K
Courts are reluctant to enforce agreements to agree
o Factors to consider when determining whether parties intended to be bound only by a formal,
signed writing
Whether a party expressly reserved the right to be bound only when a written agreement is
signed;
Whether there was any partial performance by one party that the party disclaiming the contract
accepted;
Whether all essential terms of the alleged contract had been agreed upon; and
Whether the complexity or magnitude of the transaction was such that a formal, executed
writing would normally be expected
o Case Application – Contract or Agreement to Agree?
Deli Case—Lease K had a renewal term that stated that T may renew lease for additional
period of five years at annual rental to be agreed upon. L wanted rent significantly higher than
what T had the rent appraised for.
Only an “agreement to agree” – parties are in a lease situation and sign a lease that leaves
open future deals but does so in ambiguous terms that do not disclose any of the relevant
details needed to come to culmination.
Pennzoil v. Texaco – Pennzoil and Getty Oil set out a “Memorandum of Agreement” and
drafted it to reflect the terms that had been reached in conversations. The original offer was not
acceptable to the Getty Oil Board, but new terms were agreed upon. Getty Oil and Pennzoil
both created press releases to describe the transaction, which stated, “the transaction is subject
to execution of a definitive merger agreement, approval by the stockholders of Getty Oil, and
various filing and waiting period requirements.” Meanwhile, Getty Oil’s investment banker
began calling other companies, seeking a higher bid that Pennzoil’s for Getty’s Oil shares.
Texaco made a higher bid and the Getty Oil Board voted to withdraw its previous counter-
proposal to Pennzoil and unanimously accepted Texaco’s offer.
Ruling although the magnitude of the transaction was such that normally a signed
writing would be expected, there was sufficient evidence to support an inference by the
jury that the expectation was satisfied here initially by the Memorandum of Agreement,
signed by a majority of shareholders of Getty Oil and approved by the board at a higher
price, and by the transaction agreement in progress that had been intended to memorialize
the agreement previously reached
Argue Y – The memo of agreement was a valid K that Texaco interfered with.
o Press release was using words of definiteness
o “Done deal”
o Agreement on most of key terms.
Argue N – there was no K so D couldn’t have interfered w/ anything.
o Only a memo of agreement, not a K
o This was a BIG K, it would have went on for 100’s of pages.
o Indemnification agreement
o Trade practice – in mergers there would have been extensive negotiation, (court doesn't
even touch this).
o Getty board had other alternatives.
Approve or alter
Decline or pass to shareholders
7
Let it expire by own terms
All above could imply that the “Deal wasn’t done”
Easterbrook v. Ball-Co Mfg. – Intent in contract law is objective rather than subjective – as a
matter of law, parties who make their pact “subject to” a later definitive agreement have
manifested an objective intent not to be bound. If intent were wholly subjective, as wholly a
matter of the parties’ states of mind, every contract case would have to be decided by jury trial,
and no one could know the effect of a commercial transaction until years after the documents
were inked.
City Stores Co v. Ammerman – Owner of Lansburgh’s Dept. Store desired to obtain a large
store in the Tyson’s Corner Shopping Center project. Δ offered owner opportunity to become
tenant if he wrote a letter to the county zoning authorities. Tyson’s gave the spot to Sears and
owner sues for specific performance.
Court granted specific performance
§ 2 The Offer
Offers Basically
o Definition of an offer (R § 24) 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.
o Basic Elements of an Offer
Intent (§26 Preliminary Negotiations & §24 Offer Defined)
Certainty of terms (§33 Certainty) – NO gross ambiguity.
Quantity must be specified. Courts typically cite indefiniteness or incompleteness of the
terms to avoid finding an offer. When a series of writings is involved, courts construe
intent from viewing the set of documents as a whole.
Communication – offer has to be properly communicated; communicated to the right person
Example: If X offers to Y and Z overhears is Z eligible for acceptance. NO b/c there is no
communication to Z and intent is to offer to Y not Z. Always analyze on exam using three
basic elements.
o The offeror is the master of his offer (R § 52)
o Offers are usually non-transferable unless the offer contains a special provision saying so
o Case Application
Nebraska Seed (Invitation to Bid Case)
Not an offer invitation for an offer
o No § 24 understanding
o No certainty of terms
o No bargain
o Remember to go through elements of offer!
o If imprecise language, no offer
Harsh’s offer was not forceful enough b/c he had no clear positive statement to make an
offer. He said “I want….” – Want ≠ offer.
Moulton v. Kershaw (An Offer that is Uncertain in Terms)
D, a salt dealer, sent a letter to P, who was also a salt dealer, that stated D was authorized to
offer full car-load lots of 80-95 bbls at 85 cents/ bbl. P responded in telegraph that he
wanted 2,000 barrels of the salt as offered. D declined to ship.
Argue Y: D offered a certain amount of salt at a certain price. 2,000 barrels was not an
excessive amount to order from D’s course of performance
8
Argue N: No Certainty: No key language to = offer + no maximum number of barrels
required to buy is given, could this be a needs K? can’t assume b/c D didn’t mention that;
“authorized” to do something doesn’t mean they are doing it
Restatement §33—Certainty Application; Intent and certainty often blend together To
constitute intent, words of offer must be used
Keller v. Ybarru
Offer was “so many grapes as (plaintiff) should wish to take” was a proper limit on the
amount to = a K.
Rules for specific terms helps to lower trans. costs.
Even though terms may be certain for risk , intent might not be there b/c words of offer are
absent; Remember 2-306—don’t forget the disproportionality clause
Fairmount Glass Work (Construing the Writings as a Whole)
P sent a telegram to D that asked the lowest price D had on ten car loads of mason jars
packed one dozen to a case. D responded by quoting a price for one-dozen boxes of pints,
quarts, and half gallons per gross. When D requested shipment of several gross of a
variety of jars, D said it couldn’t fill the order.
Prelude to “battle of the forms” – Each company wants to use their own form K.
Case stands as the rule that correspondence should be taken as a whole when determining
intent to offer.
Two part test
o Offer must be reasonably definite or certain
o Correspondence should be treated as a whole (conflicts with offeror as master)
Aim of court is to arrive at the intention of the parties
The offer of one party here incorporated the terms of the other so when the other
acknowledged it that served as an offer that could be accepted.
Troublesome b/c we don’t want the ee to structure the offer.
Offers and Special Situations
o Advertisements as Offers
General rule is that ads are an invitation for negotiation (§46). Some states allow for words
such as “first come, first served” or “while they last” to construe offers, but they must be clear
in the ad. Other states find offers in ads when the ad is definite. Be able to argue yes/no on
EXAM (firm, clear, intent offer v. preliminary negotiation)
Offer? analyse elements
Preliminary negotiations?
Invitation for offer
Risk Allocation if we allow ad to be offer, offeror faces risk of infinite K bad economic
policy because world of scarce resources)
Unfair trade practices? competition!
Gov’t regulation of ads is economically inefficient
Market regulation allow customers to choose where to stop
Case Application
Lefkowitz Case (Are Ads Offers?)
o D advertised in the newspaper fur coats, mink scarves, and a black lapin sole for $1.00
claiming they were worth much more. The ad state “first come, first served.” D
refused to sell the merchandise to P, the first person at the store, b/c of house rules that
only a woman could complete the sale.
9
o Go thru the three elements
GR is ads aren’t offers, they’re invitations to make an offer or bid, or seen as
unilateral that can be revoked at-will
No communication to specific offeree
Uncertain terms
o expose ad maker to infinite K risk w/ others
Izadi v. Machido Ford (Size Counts Case)
o An advertisement by D in the newspaper claimed that customers could get a $3,000
minimum trade-in allowance for any car and could get that price deducted from certain
vehicles advertised. P put the cash balance down along with a trade-in for a Ranger
pick-up, but was denied the sale due to the small, fine print of the ad that said the trade-
in was only good for Eddie Bauer Aerostar or Turbo T-Bird.
o Mischief of treating ads as offers.
o Courts generally hold that you should read all your K.
o But courts do frown on “bait and switch”
o Always have to read ad as a whole – Here Izadi ignored the small print and the court
found that the dealership was being deceptive and found for P treating the ad as an
offer.
o Cf. w/ “chicken case” – General meaning prevents proper interpretation then go to
special (narrow) meaning – Common knowledge is that the price of cars is merely an
invitation to bargain.
o Stone disagrees says they should be held to all terms of the K
On exam, argue Y and N.
Use facts to argue that ads are offers
o The print is not there
o Quantity and worth arguments such as in Lefkovitz
Use facts to argue that ads are not offers.
o Read ads as a whole
o Only a offer to bargain
Not explicit enough to be an offer, consumer will want to be able to bargain.
o Auctions and Offers (2-328 Sale by Auction)
Generally bid=offer and hammer=acceptance
Reserves
Auction w/o a reserve – Auction = offer, Highest (lowest) bid (fall of hammer) =
acceptance; no right to reject
Auction w/ a reserve – Bid = offer, auctioneer may accept or reject based on reserve price;
can reject all bids if that is his wish
Silence as to a reserve status – Usually construed as a w/ reserve auction b/c bids are
generally offers. Helps seller to get all he wants out of item that is on block.
Minimum opening bid says nothing of whether one will accept or not accept other bids.
Case Application
Well v. Schoeneweis (The Hammer Rule)
o D was to have an option to allow the highest bidder to purchase his farm w/ a 10%
down payment on the day of the sale of the farm, then quarterly payments for ten years
under a K for deed. D also decided to allow purchaser the option of taking a landlord’s
share of the crops and pay the 1979 taxes due in 1980 or to leave the landlord’s share of
the crops with the D requiring them to pay the taxes. P tendered the down payment but
10
there was a dispute over the meaning of “quarterly payments.” P and D were unable to
negotiate these payments.
o D contends: Language in the sale bills makes the written K a precondition to the
acceptance of the bid. The K was too indefinite to be susceptible of SP. P abandoned
the K. SOF applies.
o H: Specific performance is upheld.
Specialty Maintenance v. Rosen Systems (Auction w/ Reserve Case)
o Jury found for auctioneer
o P says w/out reserve b/c in ad it said w/out minimum which means w/out reserve
(highest bidder gets it)
o Question of fact of auctioneer’s intent
o Court agrees w/ jury but says it could go the other way
o See PROBLEMS ON PAGE 468
Exam Hypo – What language would be explicit enough to get it out or in the realm of w/
reserve after rules are given? Rule is that auctions are w/reserve unless goods are in explicit
terms w/out reserve.
o General Contractor/Subcontractor Bids
Sub-Contractors and Keeping the Offer Open (Hand v. Traynor)
A sub will put a bid into a general contractor who then uses that bid for his submission to
the client. General relies on sub’s figure to figure his bid.
Should the Sub be required to fulfill his bid (i.e. was his bid an offer, and better yet was the
reliance of the general the acceptance, Is there a K?)?
Campbell v. Va. Metal Ind. – Gen relies on sub’s oral bid for doors in his K w/ company.
Sub fails to provide doors and Gen sues. Sub claims protection by 2-201 of the UCC that a
K for goods of more than $500 has to be in writing.
o P argues that the doors are unique and specific so therefore they should be awarded
spec. performance. N.C. Fed court agrees that the promise made by Va. was binding.
o This is a problem as this is a Fed court changing state law; writing generally required
by UCC 2-201, but case is an exception b/c of specially manufactured goods (2-201(3)
(1)(a)); This is Drennan approach
o Only two times when Spec. Perf should be awarded
No adequate remedy at law for P
Irreparable harm to P if equity is not applied
Montgomery Ind. v. Thomas – K1 = original bid by sub, K2 = $32500 increase by sub
demanded and agreed to by P, K3 = K w/ school client.
o Gen’l refuses to pay $32.5k over what was original bid, Court analyzes first bid like
Traynor finding it irrevocable after relied upon by D. Court also says that K2 was done
by economic duress. (No justifiable reliance under §87-§90)
o Argue for the Sub – He made a mistake and the Gen’l agreed to it and then won’t pay,
who is duressing who here? According to facts Gen’l had notice of mistake b-4 K so
he could have checked it out if he had wanted to.
o Call it bilateral or unilateral, sub performed fully when he held up his end of the
bargain (consider implied/quantum meruit contract)
o Can a Gen’l really rely on a sub’s bid when it is such a competitive market and bids
could be seen as preliminary negotiation
o Need to use planning to get around the problems of reliance.
Traynor v. Hand Argument
11
o Drennan v. Star Paving – Offer or bid is based on mistake and Star wants to revoke
bid. Drennan covers and sues for the difference in cover and bid.
Modern View/Traynor View/Reliance Doctrine Applies! (Landmark California
Case)
General rule Bid = offer
Two main questions:
Was the offer revoked?
Did reliance make the offer irrevocable?
Traynor’s view:
No revocation justifiable reliance
Rule: Where there is an offer for a unilateral contract, if part performance
occurs, the offeror cannot revoke if the offeree justifiably relies on the offer
o In this case, the contractor used the bid (K1) in order to make his general
bid (K2)
o Traynor says it is a unilateral contract. Subcontractor makes the offer
(promise) and general contractor accepts with an act. General’s act of
submitting a bid is part performance, so the offer is irrevocable. General
relied on the subcontractor’s bid in making his bid so the subcontractor’s
offer is irrevocable. Traynor finds justifiable reliance.
o James Baird Co. v. Gimbel Bros – Dept. of Highways in PA had asked for bids for the
construction of a public building. The defendant sent an employee to compute the
amount of the linoleum which would be required for the job, and he underestimated the
total yardage by one-half the proper amount. The plaintiff, received the bid on the
twenty-eighth, and on the same day the defendant learned its mistake and telegraphed
plaintiff that it withdrew the bid and would substitute a new one at about double the
old. The public authorities accepted the plaintiff’s bid on December thirtieth, which
was based upon price quoted by defendant.
Traditional view/Common Law Rule/Hand View
Unless there are circumstances to take it out of the ordinary doctrine, since the offer
was withdrawn before it was accepted, the acceptance was too late. (Rest. 35)
Defendant argues promissory estoppel (Rest. 90) but the court holds that an offer
for an exchange is not meant to become a promise until consideration has been
received. In this case, the defendant offered to deliver the linoleum in exchange for
the plaintiff’s acceptance, not for its bid, which was a matter of indifference to it.
That offer could become a promise to deliver only when the equivalent was
received; that is, when plaintiff promised to take and pay for it. No promissory
estoppel. No contract.
We could use a condition precedent approach—make a contract but use a condition
precedent, “we are not going to provide the linoleum unless the third party (k2) is
won by the contractor.” Cosean contracting—lower transaction costs.
Stone likes this view—clear planning to avoid the slippery slope of justifiable
reliance.
Difference is that Justice Hand found a bilateral K b/c the sub makes a promise
(Bid from Sub) for a promise (Acceptance from Gen). It is kind of like the sub
becomes the OR so the power of acceptance is in the Gen’l. The power of
acceptance that was in the Gen’l was terminated by the Sub’s revocation.
Why didn’t Hand find §90 reliance like Traynor?
Economic efficiency and a free ride by the Gen’l K’or if he really didn’t want
the bid, the street has to go both ways.
12
Also, §90 relies only historically to a few gratuitous areas where there is no
bargain and exchange – only applies to charitable gifts.
Intent: No intent to be bound – the notice of mistake and the revocation goes b-
4 the notice of acceptance.
o Sub says “prompt acceptance after awarding of K to Gen’l K’” OR
o “If successful in being awarded the K” means future and not certain.
o Summary of Two Views
Traynor: Drennan = Unilateral K = Implied terms = equity and estoppel
Hand: Gimbel = Bilateral K = Express promises = offeror is master of his offer
TRAYNOR HAND
PROS Unilateral flexibility of K Bilateral
process; don’t have to use provides
formal or option K; incentive certainty in the
for general to rely law over
vagueness of
May be faster process; lower §87/§90
transactions costs
Hand is consistent
Incentive to avoid bid mistakes with Dickenson v.
Dodds; either
have K or not
Incentive to make
other side bound
before going
forward with offer
Market regulation
of K
CONS Uncertainty; reduces law to Said to be rigid
case by case fact issues and inflexible
13
Rule: Ever since James Baird v. Gimbel Bros, the courts have uniformly refused to treat
the general’s use of the sub’s bid as acceptance which would bind the general
contractor. Instead, the sub’s bid is treated as an offer to form a bilateral contract, and
the general is bound only if he accepts by a return promise.
Planning application for getting around this mess.
o K around the problem of this accept or non-accept and risk of court using one method
of interpretation or another.
o If lawyer for Gen’l what do you do?
Put an option (for C) in to handle the situation to either give you an assurance or
allowing an option.
Expressly limit K to a non-option, bid means bid, if you put it in you got to go by
it.
Condition precedent in language of K (If such and such happens, then bound by K)
o Goal is to facilitate commerce by putting resources to their highest and best use
(Coase).
Exam Time
o Stone may want a statute to clean up whether subs and generals may rely on submitted
bids. Either require or don’t require reliance.
I would probably not require reliance, b/c this is a bilateral K the promise is for a
promise and speaking of inequity the General still retains the right to withdraw so
both are even, this seems better suited to the market, if the sub keeps w/d bids he
will get a bad name.
Plumber wants to bid on several jobs but is concerned about the general relying on
his bid and holding him to it.
Thinks the other Generals may not want an option K
Doesn’t think that General may agree to use the bid until approved.
Advise this person and tell him what he needs to do.
Solution: Try to get around the reliance thing by forming contract to be one that
is only accepted if the General is awarded the big one.
Death of Offers 5 Basic Situations
o Revocation – Offeror kills his own offer by withdrawing before acceptance (§ 42 and §43)
Two part test:
Offeror takes definite action inconsistent with an intention to enter into the proposed K
AND
Offeree acquires reliable information to that effect
o States are split on whether actual or constructive knowledge is sufficient. Argue both
sides.
Can be through words or actions
How can revocation be communicated
Revocation by Direct Communication- offers made by publication may be terminated
through comparable means (an offer in the New York Times should be revoked in the New
York Times, not Reader’s Digest)
Revocation by Indirect Communication- if information of revocation is received by
reliable source that the offeror no longer wants to extend his offer.
Effective when received by the offeree. Where revocation is by publication, it is effective
when published.
Irrevocable offers:
14
Option K (R. §37) – this is a distinct contract which the offeree gives consideration for a
promise by the offeror not to revoke an outstanding offer
Firm Offers under UCC 2-205 – an offer by a merchant to buy or sell goods that is in a
signed writing and by its terms states that it will be held open is not revocable for lack of
consideration.
Detrimental Reliance – where the offeror could reasonably expect the offeree would rely to
her detriment on the offer.
Part Performance – previously, a unilateral offer was revocable until performance was
complete. This has been eroded considerably by the following:
o Implied contracts are given a reasonable time to complete performance in which time
the offer is irrevocable
o Divisibility – when the consideration by both parties can be divided into obvious
segments
o Offeree compensated for partial performance completed according to damage suffered
by reliance on the offer (avoiding unjust enrichment)
o Part performance defined – preparing to perform is not part performance, or if the
performance is tendered by the offeree but refused by the offeror, the withholding of
tender is part performance.
o Offer indifferent as to Manner of Acceptance – a bilateral contract is indifferent as to
manner of acceptance, so beginning of performance is acceptance and revocation is
impossible
Dickenson v. Dodds
A type of indirect revocation case.
D is selling his farm and makes an offer to P, keeping the offer open until X time. P hears
that D has sold before the time has expired and comes around wanting to accept. P’s
acceptance is no good if he has received communication that D has already sold thereby
revoking his offer to P.
Legal Issue: Whether the offer was revoked when Dickinson learned that there was
another offer
Argue YES for revocation
o Here, revoked when P (offeree) heard of sale of unique property from a third party
o also from a RPP standard
o consider intent b/c no meeting of the minds (§24)
Argue NO revocation here
o Revocation was not totally clear to P
o P received the revocation from a 3rd party.
o B should be held to his worth
o Analyze on Consideration grounds.
D’s promise was for P’s promise to buy the farm, there was no consideration given
by P for D to keep his offer open until the time
This is called a nudum pactum – naked pact – not clothed in consideration so
therefore not an offer
o Rejection – Offeree rejects the offer and that kills it, even if offeree comes back later to accept on
same terms the offer is still dead. (Restatement §38)
General Rule
§38(1) An offeree’s power of acceptance is terminated by his rejection of the offer,
UNLESS the offeree has manifested a contrary intention. (Intent is the key word here)
15
§38(2) Allows offeree to reject and manifest contrary intention by “taking it under
advisement.”
o Policy is that offeror can then cease plans or preparation in anticipation of an
acceptance.
o Offeree can afterwards re-open negotiations w/o the fear that his action will be
construed as an acceptance of the original offer (which is now dead).
Example: A makes an offer to B and adds: “This offer will remain open for a week.” B
rejects the offer the following day, but later in the week purports to accept it. – There is no K
unless the offer was itself a K. B’s purported acceptance is itself a new offer.
o Counter-Offer – Offeree makes a new offer and thereby kills the old one when he offers new
terms. Labels switch and the offeree becomes the offeror. (Restatement §39)
General Rule
An offer made by the offeree that contains the same subject matter as the original offer but
differs in its terms. It is a rejection of the original offer and a new offer. Watch out for
inquiries.
o Test is whether a reasonable person would believe that the original offer had been
rejected or that the offeree was seeking further negotiations.
o Effective when received by the offeror
Revival of Offer occurs when the offeror restates the offer and creates a new power of
acceptance
o Indicates interest by the party but on a different set of terms, thereby killing the first
offer and making a new one, that is why the parties switch titles.
Example: A offers B to sell him a parcel of land for $5k, stating the offer to remain open
for 30 days. B replies “I’ll give you $4.8k for it, A declines and B replies w/in the 30 days
accepting for $5k. NO CONTRACT, why, b/c when B countered, it killed A’s original
offer (if A’s original was a K, then that is different). A’s reply to the counteroffer could
have manifested an intention to renew his original offer resulting in proper acceptance by
B.
Counter-Offer Must Have all Elements of Offer
Other Counter-Offer Rules
o Restatement §59 Communications intending to be acceptances but adding new
terms are deemed rejections and counter-offers rather than acceptance.
Example: A makes an offer to B, and B in terms accepts but adds, “This acceptance
is not effective unless prompt acknowledgement is made of receipt of this letter.”
There is no K, but a counter-offer
o Restatement §61 An acceptance which requests a change or addition to the terms of
the offer is not invalidated unless the acceptance is made to depend on an assent to the
changed or added terms
Example: A offers to sell B 100 tons of steel for x price. B replies, “Accept, but
hope that if you can arrange to deliver the steel in wkly installments of 25 tons you
will” There is a K, but A is not obligated to deliver in installments.
o Death or Incapacity of Offeror – No A is possible (Restatement §48)
Termination by death or insanity of parties does not have to be communicated to the other
party but will automatically terminate the offer (Incapacity also qualifies – coma etc.)
Only refers to offers – argue Y and N to see if K still stands after acceptance.
o Lapse of Time – offer may establish the period during which it is open. (R §41/ UCC 1-205)
Where the offer does not specify a time period for its existence, the rule is that the offer
expires at the end of a “reasonable time.”
What is reasonable depends on:
16
the nature of the proposed K
the communications of parties as to goals/purposes
prior course of dealing
usages of trade
o Direct negotiations- when contact is face to face, by phone, or by email, a reasonable
time doesn’t extend beyond the contact
o Speculative transactions- very short time is expected when the price of the item is
volatile (stocks, commodities, options, futures); when the price is stable, there is a
longer window (consumer goods, land sales)
o Test is what time period would be thought satisfactory to the OR by a RPP in the
position of the offeree, but the offeror may extend the period by indicating that the time
taken was acceptable to him.
Look to the time the offer is received by the offeree. If the offer is delayed in
transmission or the OR should suspect it was delayed, the offer terminates at the
time it would have expired had there been no delay. When a party uses time to take
advantage of price fluctuations, there may be a lack of good faith that permits the
OR to refuse the transaction (UCC 1-205, 2-103)
o Example: While A and B are engaged in conversation, A makes B an offer to which B
then makes no reply, but on meeting A again a few hours later B states that he accepts
the offer. –There is no K unless the offer or the circumstances indicate that the offer is
intended to continue beyond the immediate conversation.
§3 Acceptance
18
Was P’s tender an acceptance of D’s offer to accept less than full value? P tried to accept –
He started the process by tendering the cash – but court said that acceptance was not valid
b/c offer was revoked (more importantly acceptance was not what was required by D’s
offer).
Why was acceptance not effective?
o B/c offeror asked not for a promise of money but an act of actually paying money so a
promise of payment is ineffective.
o OFFER FOR A UNILATERAL K CAN ONLY BE ACCEPTED BY THE ACT
REQUESTED NOT A PROMISE TO DO IT. §50(1)(3) §58
Dissent: P showed up to pay and that was the act required by Rest. §50(2) that says tender
is enough for acceptance by part performance. §45 (Option K Created by Part
Performance)
Problem is how much performance is enough to amount to an acceptance – showing up is
mere preparation to perform and D wants the $ not talk of $. Also, creating more
transactions costs b/c offeror has made K w/ a third party
D made a business judgment call where he wanted an act for a promise. Can debtor avoid
the result, yes could have accepted outright or counter offered w/ a bilateral K.
Brackenberry v. Hodgkin (A Reliance/ Estoppel Concept)
Old lady asked for an Act – full perf. of lifetime care.
Couldn’t argument be made that unjust enrichment went to daughter not mom b/c daughter
received whole deal for part performance
Both sides – mom would only allow part perf. and trial court found that Mom was “at
fault” (a tort concept).
What happens now? Do mom’s have any incentive not to be “at fault”
Mom should have been master of her offer and been able to revoke at any time before full
performance had been completed.
How much Part performance is enough? Here the court finds that there was full acceptance
by part performance. (50(2)) or (§45)
o Under common law, part performance would not have been enough the performer
would have been entitled to a quantum meruit recovery (R. §30(1))
Sunshine v. Manos (Part Performance Test of Definite & Substantial Nature)
Same problem as above – How much part perf is enough to = acceptance.
Court said test for part performance of a definite and substantial nature is enough
Point is that statement is uncertain and impossible to know how much is enough, this leads
to the slippery slope of equity and a case-by-case determination of facts.
Use Pattberg to analyze (§58) – would tender be enough for this court?
Court seems to go to a §50(2)/§45/§87/§90 reliance stand, P has gotten a loan that didn’t
conform to the agreement so therefore has breached the agreement even if they had
expended time and money, so are only able to recover expenses, when is winning losing.
Court uses an “I tried” rule to let P have the recovery.
D could have avoided liability by letting the K die by its own terms on account of P’s
nonconformance to the terms (§49).
Davis v. Jacoby (Court drops unilateral for bilateral K)
Uncle writes to niece asking her and husband to come to Cali and take care of him and his
wife (consider that an offer), there was an attempted bi-lateral K acceptance by promise on
part of niece and husband (consider that attempted acceptance). Niece PREPARES to go
to Cali but the uncle commits suicide and niece goes out anyway in an attempt to accept.
Uncle does not follow through on promise to leave money to niece.
19
D’s argue that it was a unilateral K only accepted by full performance and the offer was
revoked under §48, death of offeror or revoked under letter of 4/15/31. P’s obviously
argue a bilateral K and say that they accepted by promise, in lieu of the court finding a
bilateral K, there was part performance by their prep to move and then the move itself.
Was it unilateral or bilateral?
o Cal. S.C. finds a bilateral b/c the PRESUMPTION is for a bilateral K, should make
part perf. doctrine irrelevant b/c can be accepted by promise.
o Court says that a bilateral K would protect a reasonable expectation of the parties
Why? On part of P’s would protect the certainty of performance or remedy against
D’s.
For deceased – he wants the certainty of promise for aid by the offerees – He has to
rely on their promise.
Was the court engaging in subjective mind reading?
o Y: What did old man want? For the p’s to actually move out there and care for him, not
a promise to do so.
o Argue Y and N for the ambiguous offer argument as well. Maybe the old man wasn’t
clear in what he was offering or method of acceptance.
o Hypotheticals
Brooklyn Bridge Hypo
Unilateral K of A saying to B “I’ll give you $100 if you walk across bridge” is a promise
for an act.
If A wanted to make a bilateral K then he could have termed it differently such as “..if you
promise to walk across the bridge” if B accepts and doesn’t walk then we have breach.
In Unil K even if A stops B from performing then A is not bound b/c A is the master of his
offer (under common law via Patterson case).
Seem hard on B? If a case where B has unjustly enriched A, B can get that back and also
B always has the right to not do it and won’t change his position.
Gen. Motors wanted to close plant that made Caprice’s and move operations to TX to make a
better selling model. Officials in MI sued for breach of K. GM promised to provide
employment if tax abatements were granted.
Is there a K? Court says no, but holds under estoppel; Trial court judge issued injunction
against GM
Where is the acceptance by the city? the city’s act of excluding GM each year from
collection of taxes; court said city relied on GM’s promise each year. Analysis: GM was
losing money, so wanted to go to better economic place
Did GM promise to keep the plant open? apply Patterson and Brackenbury cases
o Conclusions
Pattberg theory is the common law acceptance by part performance, and Sunshine and
Brackenbury represents the change to §90 reliance.
K is the world of voluntary agreement, reliance doctrine forces an agreement by the court.
Takes wealth instead of creating it
Doesn’t work b/c it offers party the chance of K by hope that doesn’t always come through
and raises a false sense of security in contrast to C/L rule.
Acceptance and the Battle of the Forms
o Empire Machinery v. Litton (Acceptance Via Home Office)
At trial court: Finds a bilateral K view and says that D never consummated the agreement so
no recovery for P’s. Court of appeal reverses and says Unilateral K and that D’s accepted by
part performance of the K and allowed P to waive a portion of D’s own form by said
performance.
20
How did P waive the relevant section that required acceptance only by the home office?
B/c we got a new offer by the buyer
S lost control of its form
Offeror is the master of his own offer and consistent w/ form sends the check
Litton (D) by performance accepts the offer of Empire (that made by sending the check).
Offeree becomes the seller and the buyer becomes the offeror using the seller’s sales form.
Empire wants an act of doing or a promise of doing R. §32 allowing the offeree to choose their
acceptance (and did so by cashing the check and other things).
Waiver b/c is efficient that acceptance has taken place by part performance
Rewards and the Law of Offer and Acceptance See §58, §60
o Rewards are an offer for a return act (unilateral K)
The offeror is still the master of his offer
May state a time limit for acceptance Newman v. Schiff
o Who may recover?
Only those who are aware of the outstanding offer.
Well-known exception for offers of rewards by governmental bodies. (One who is ignorant
may collect from gov’t).
o Time may lapse on reward Gen rule is that offer will lapse after a “reasonable time” (§41)
o Offer of reward may be revoked (§46) By method in which it was given if given to public at
large, then has to be revoked by providing to public at large those who do not see revocation
cannot assert acceptance.
o Acceptance of reward by performance (§51)
Part of acts performed before learning of reward
Present law holds that one who has partially performed the called for act may accept and
receive the reward by completing the act.
o Actions taken pursuant to a legal duty. (§73) Police, fire and rescue are not entitled to a reward
if they were under a legal duty to perform the act before they undertook the desired performance.
o Actions not motivated by reward can usually recover
o Actions different from requested acceptance can usually recover
o Apportionment of rewards Should equal contributors to an act get the reward?
o Reliance
Should the court allow a person who has undertaken that performance requested by the
rewarding party the remedy of expenses even if no completion?
Cf. w/ the Sunshine case and the “I tried” rule of that decision.
I say NO.
Acceptance by Silence
o General Rule – Mere silence doesn’t constitute acceptance EXCEPT
Prior course of dealing
Conduct of party that could be reasonably construed as acceptance
Usage of trade
o An offeree who does any act inconsistent w/ the offeror’s ownership of offered property is bound
in accordance w/ the offered terms unless they are manifestly unreasonable. But if the act is
wrongful as against the offeror it is an acceptance only if ratified by him. Determined by an
objective standard.
o Why Have the “No Acceptance by silence” rule?
Protect parties and people’s freedom from a forced K situation
Offeree always should have the power of acceptance.
Three possible scenarios for acceptance by silence.
21
Silence outright when a reasonable person would have responded.
Prior dealing.
Retention w/o rejection for unreasonable amount of time.
o Acceptance of Mis-shipped Goods
Use of goods = Acceptance by silence (§69 Acceptance by silence or exercise of dominion).
One particular U.S. statute considers unsolicited goods sent through the mail as gifts.
o Case Application
Hobbs v. Whip
Silence can amount to acceptance
Parties in Hobbs don’t enter into an express K (eel skins were shipped to D w/o his request,
he kept them for awhile and then destroyed them)..
Court finds course of dealing and assumes acceptance
Ransom v. Penn Mutual
Case centers on the method that an insurance company uses for the acceptance of an offer
to insure.
o O + A = K, O + P (premium) = K, or O + C = K: Which is it for the insurance company
to agree to cover someone?
o P offers to pay for coverage, company has to accept based on health exam.
Terms of an insurance K
o Company has to OK applicants health
o Requests P to seek a physical exam (in this case a second exam).
o Life insurance says there was no K because before P could get 2nd exam he died
o Court, though, finds a K created by the mere payment of the first premium although the
K clearly stated that no coverage effective until acceptance by home office.
Court sees P’s payment as an offer and until home office acts to terminate there is
acceptance by silence. Whose K is it anyway?
Court uses an unconscionability and reasonable expectation analysis.
o Maybe unconscionable in that D took the $ and was able to draw interest while P is
waiting for coverage, benefit to D but not to P if D doesn’t accept a risk of loss.
o Court could have returned the premium + interest to P’s beneficiary w/o the elevation
of this to a full –blown K and avoided overcompensating P.
o P should have read his K, a reasonable person should have known that K said NO
COVERAGE, subject to approval. (no guarantee of coverage either).
o Court gives us the O + P = K, the acceptance should come from the insurance company
not the P, his premium was only consideration NOT acceptance.
Arguing for the court, D could have gotten a binder on the gap period, we can’t make a
living insuring high-risk applicants and paying out before approval.
Insurance company seeks to avoid trans. Cost
Result is that policyholders get to cover costs externalized by the insurance company.
Felton v. Finley (Attorney Sues for Fees)—See §69(1)(a)
Offeree says “I don’t accept the benefit of your (offeror’s ) services”, but lawyer still sues
and wants his fees for work performed on behalf of some of the parties to a will dispute.
o Court holds that acceptance of the benefits give rise to an implied K.
o After rehearing, however the court holds not implied K.
What happens if D gets benefits w/o paying fees? He gets a windfall of both.
Argue for holding on rehearing (no basis for implied in fact K)
o Attorney had no reasonable expectation to collect his fees.
He only K’d w/ two brothers not the D.
D was an incidental beneficiary who received only b/c he was in the will.
22
o However, D explicitly said that he didn’t want services but court allows D to recover.
o However, D had no opportunity to reject.
o Does atty want coerced compliance from D?
Maybe as D didn’t even want to K
There were other options available to both parties
Consider Common Fund Doctrine (p. 553)—implied in law K
§ 5 Precontractual Liability
Kearns v. Andree (Using Reliance/Estoppel as a Gap Filler in Precontract Liability)
23
o Court’s rule here is equity for recovery when the K is unenforceable, seller can recover for
expenses made in expectation of fulfillment of K
Is essentially justifiable reliance, but here for precontractual liability, parties had not
consummated K relationship yet.
P assumed a K and then relied on his own assumption
o Stones rules of life and contract
Don’t assume anything.
Never say never
You can’t always say always
Use thinking and planning rather than emotion and begging.
o Who should bear the risks? The party who failed to plan and utilize the writing and the statute
of frauds.
Hoffman v. Red Owl Stores (Recovery for Expenses Only)
o Various names: Babe in the woods, court equity welfare case, case of the ultimate gap fillers
Hoffman’s ultimate goal was a franchise
He was supposed to do many things for the store before he would get said franchise, BUT he
didn’t follow through.
o What is his K?
He had no offer so he could not purport an acceptance and therefore no K here.
This is only PRELIM. NEGOT.
Not a K b/c there were not set terms to seal the deal.
Argue Yes:
Not a pure breach of K under § 17 so has to argue §90 reliance.
Unequal bargaining plane b/w parties, big ol’ mean store v. babe in the Ohio woods
Hoffman.
Argue N to liability for Red Owl on bad faith argument b/c there are “costs to being poor” and
shouldn’t punish D for his superior bargaining skills while rewarding P for his ignorance.
o Restatement §90 – Three Elements
Was the promise one which the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or
forbearance of a definite and substantial character on the part of the promise?
Did the promise induce such action or forbearance?
Can injustice be avoided only by enforcement of the promise?
o What could Hoffman have done? Gotten a lawyer to seek out a true K that lists his rights and
obligations, getting rid of all uncertainty of terms and prelim negotiation garbage.
o Other Notes
Court in Hoffman used a disciplined mind by not awarding expectancy damages only
restitution
When is winning losing? Hoffman expended all his resources thinking he could recover
his lost profits but only won what he had spent.
Why didn’t court grant specific performance?
Court won’t force an agreement b/w two unwilling parties (where animosity exists)
comparable to a “shotgun business wedding.”
o Hoffman Rule: One may in some circumstances come under a duty to bargain in good faith,
breach of which duty may result in liability for damages, at least to the extent of compensating the
detrimental reliance of the injured party.
Wheeler v. White (Note Case—Reliance Damages Only) Where the promise has failed to bind
the promisor to a legally sufficient K, but where the promise has acted in reliance upon a promise to
his detriment, the promise is to be allowed to recover no more than reliance damages measured by the
detriment sustained.
Consolidated Grain & Barge (Unenforceable Negotiation Clause)
24
o P sued D for lost profits due to failure to negotiate profits it was to receive. A clause had been
included to negotiate in good faith
o Negotiation clause is unenforceable because it is neither a basis for determining the existence of a
breach nor for giving an appropriate remedy.
o Any remedy suggested by P would require the court to determine the substance of the agreement.
25
o Unilateral mistake
General rule is not to grant relief for a unilateral mistake
Exception is: Honest clerical error
Does not include an error of judgment on the price quote
Also, consider the common law rule that principals are responsible for the actions of their
agents
Most often comes up in construction/sub-contractor bid situations.
o Courts are skeptical because owner is responsible for his own bid.
o GE case – puts burden of mistake on the bidder b/c is in an equal position of discovery
We don’t reward someone for their negligence in estimating.
Baptist Church case – relief for unilateral mistake because of honest clerical mistake
Judgment is view that some courts take for all mistakes b/c bidder is in charge of his offer
and bid.
Three-part test for rescission due to clerical error
Mistaken party has to return the innocent party to status quo
One party knows or has reason to know of the other party’s clerical error
Rescission is to prevent an unconscionable taking advantage of the other party
o Mistake Caused by…
Impossibility of performance
Breach of express warranty
Clear fraud
Innocent misrepresentation
Implied warranty
Failure of ones duty to disclose
o Restatement § 154 – Allocation of Risks
Entering K is all about taking risks and dealing w/ imperfect information so courts don’t like to
look at situation ex post and decide that party should be able to rescind.
Result is that few courts grant relief for mistake when parties are responsible for their own
info gathering.
Ways in which the risk of loss will be allocated to a party, thereby removing possibility of
recovery from him
Agreement of the parties – freedom of K, you can always agree to accept the risk of loss.
(See Lenawee Cty. Board of Health)
Awareness of limited knowledge – if risk taker has only limited knowledge with respect to
the facts to which the mistake relates but treats his limited knowledge as sufficient.
(conscious ignorance)
o Wood v. Boynton P sold a rock for $1, both seller and buyer believing it to be topaz,
was actually an uncut diamond worth $700. Court denied rescission to seller reasoning
that it was a case of “mere adequacy of price.” Consideration rule could help here;
dispute is over the amount of consideration
By the court – allocation of risks to party by the court but only if it is reasonable in the
circumstances.
Market conditions – usually a mistake about market conditions will always result in the risk
being allocated to the one who should know, usually the seller. This info is readily available.
o Release forms
A party may agree to release another party from all claims arising out of a certain transaction.
26
Courts are more willing to grant rescission on fact patterns which involve a personal injury
claim release as opposed to those which are in a commercial setting.
Misrepresentation
o R. § 163 – Misrepresentation to the character or essential terms of a proposed contract induces
conduct that appears to be a manifestation of assent by one who neither knows or has reasonable
opportunity to know of the character or essential terms of the proposed contract.
Deceit – breach of fiduciary duty or otherwise to disclose
Negligent Misrepresentation – failing to use reasonable care in obtaining or communicating
information
Innocent Misrepresentation
o R § 162—Must be Fraudulent and Material
Fraudulent – promise maker intends his assertion to induce another party to manifest his assent
and the maker either:
Knows or believes that the assertion is not in accord with the facts,
Does not have the confidence that he states or implies in the truth of his assertion, OR
Knows that he does not have the basis that he states or implies for the assertion.
Material – If it would be likely to induce a reasonable person to manifest his assent, or if the
maker knows that it would be likely to induce the recipient to do so.
o R § 161 – Non-disclosure can be actual misrepresentation where:
He knows that disclosure is necessary to prevent some previous assertion from being a
misrepresentation or from being fraudulent and material
He knows that a disclosure of the fact would correct the mistake of the other party, and good
faith and fair dealing require him to disclose
The other person is entitled to know the fact because of a special relationship or fiduciary duty.
o Analysis of Duty to Disclose
Begin ex ante, neither party has information
Who has incentive and is in best position
Three-part test
Equally difficult to discover, no duty to disclose is required—high information costs
to both (tobacco case)
If S can more efficiently discover, he has responsibility to disclose
If B can more efficiently discover, he has responsibility to disclose
Both parties can have duty to look out for own economic self-interest—will be rare for court to
say parties don’t have equal access to information
o Laidlaw v. Organ (The Duty to Disclose and a Little a/b Fraud)
The buyer knew the facts and did not disclose them to the seller who suffered a loss as a result.
Only one party was mistaken as to facts seller = unilateral mistake and generally make the
mistaken party bear the loss.
B/c buyer did not disclose what he knew we may have a case for fraud here; 2 kinds.
Fraud in the inducement – one party fraudulently encourages another to enter into a K w/
him.
Fraud in execution – self-explanatory READ IN SUPPLEMENTS
This case concerns fraud in the inducement, but does mere failure to disclose a fact constitute
active fraud?
Not unless party has a duty to disclose (in this case was for trial court to figure on remand).
General rule: Party has no duty to disclose, each party should look out for his own self-
interest, especially when info is readily available.
27
Silence as active fraud: One party cannot do or say anything to impose misinformation on
another party
o Active failure to respond to a direct Q is active fraud of not disclosing full information
What is imposing “misinformation”?
o Shouldn’t buyer have “property rights” to the information that he has?
o If we require him to disclose then that is coercion of his rights for the benefit of others
who haven’t expended the effort to get the info.
o Upton Case (Calling of the Wrong Fire Dept. Case)
No free lunches
Powell refuses to pay for fire service b/c he mistakenly thought he was in the same district at
the time he called.
Powell believes he’s received a gratuitous service
Ct. says Powell was seeking services, not a gift
Real question is what was the intent of the parties?
Can argue mutual mistake—Powell who mistakenly sought a gratuitous service, called police
dept. and police dept. mistakenly called the wrong fire dept.
Also can argue that there was an implied K
Impossibility
o Basic rule is that a contract is excused for impossibility when the contract cannot be completed,
not when the defendant cannot complete the contract.
o When alleging impossibility, the party relying on impossibility must establish:
The unexpected occurrence of an intervening act
The occurrence was of such a character that its non-occurrence was a basic assumption of the
agreement of the parties
Occurrence made performance impracticable
o All three must be satisfied to qualify for the defense. Foreseeability of the occurrence is only a
factor. The risk must be one that, although foreseeable, should not be guarded against.
o R. § 261 – here, after a contract is made (if before, it’s mistake law area), a party’s
performance is made impracticable, without his fault, by the occurrence of an event.
The event must be one that was not foreseeable by the parties and could not be planned for. It
is measured by an objective standard.
Presumption is not to excuse unless one of the following three:
Contract for personal services, but death intervenes
Contract where intervening legislation makes performance illegal (I would imagine a K for
liquor and then gov’t outlaws, buyer would be excused).
Subsequent destruction of the subject matter of the K as long as promisor was not at fault
and it is truly impossible to fulfill terms of K.
o Distinguish b/w repairs (where excuse is possible b/c there is nothing left to repair) and
new building (where excuse is not b/c builder can start all over).
o A K for unique services is one that will be declared impossible but one for services
that may be delegated is not
o Measured by objective standard: nobody could perform according to the terms of the
K.
o Two Types of “Less-Strict” Impossibility
Impracticability (Restatement § 261)
Requires that a party encounter extreme and unreasonable difficulty or expense that was
not anticipated
o A mere change (not extreme) in cost will not be enough to allow impracticability.
28
Exception: Alcoa case
ALCOA contracted to buy aluminum shipped by X and price was to increase
proportionally to increase in price index.
Court agreed to let ALCOA out of the K as they would lose a bunch of money if
not; same lines as the other case
Argue ALCOA accepted risk – chose Greenspan and the formulas; agreed to the
price under the formula, now trying to back out
Alternatives: Put in a negotiation clause and series of renewal K
Frustration of purpose (Restatement § 265)
Where, after a K is made, a party’s principal purpose is substantially frustrated w/o his
fault by the occurrence of an event (the non-occurrence of which was a basic assumption
on which the K was made), his remaining duties to render performance are discharged,
unless the language or circumstances indicate the contrary.
o Basically means that in a supervening event the very reason a party entered into the K
in the first place can’t happen anymore.
o Distinguished from impossibility in that the K can be performed but the purpose is no
longer there.
Ex. Coronation cases: P rents a room along the coronation route of King Edward,
Ed falls ill and can’t go on parade, P’s purpose of getting the room is frustrated b/c
the reason for getting it is gone, if hotel had burnt down, then there might be
impossibility.
Requirements
o A supervening event (something that happens after K is entered into)
o Event not reasonably foreseeable at the time of entering into the K
o Completely or almost completely destroys the purpose of entering the K.
o Purpose was understood by both parties.
Basic argument against frustration
o K is risky business and we take risks all the time
o K planning represents allocation f risk and possibility that there will be frustration, not
relief for it.
o Does frustration try to make all winners and no losers?
How to plan for impossibility, impracticability, or frustration
o Contingency Clause
o Cost Plus
o Third Party Insurance
o Renegotiation for long contracts
o Remedies for impossibility, impracticability, or frustration
GR courts generally leave parties where they find them and just rescind K
Exceptions:
May give dollar damages—R 272 (Shipping/ Suez case), but is a rare exception
If there’s been partial performance (Carroll v. Bowersock)
o Must prove performance by P
o Must also prove benefit to the other side (a practical benefit)
o Case Application
Taylor v. Caldwell – case in which D rented out his concert hall to P and it soon burnt down, P
sues for damages and court finds that b/c the subject matter of the K was gone it was
impossible to perform.
29
Was the court wrong?
P could have sought damages b/c there were probably other venues in which the D
could have paid for the fee.
Hall owner took risk that his hall would still be there when it came time to have the
concert.
Really though, D was ready, willing and able to perform but for the impossibility of
doing so as result of the fire.
Assuming the risk
Who assumes the risks of nonperformance due to unforeseen hardship; how do we allocate
the loss?
Ex ante up front efficiency analysis
o Who has the best position to prepare for and avoid the loss
o In the house builder example – builder is in almost complete control of the risks b/c
owner is not in control yet
NIPSCO case – Posner economic analysis case
Notes: True impossibility could be tornado strikes plant, or strike shuts plant down
NIPSCO claims that it is impossible to perform b/c of ruling PSC who makes them find a
cheaper power source when NIPSCO is locked into a K w/ coal company.
Posner does not allow N to get out of K just b/c they made a bad judgment decision, should
have known that PSC could change things up on them
Simple rules for allocating risks
o The black and white rules of K – the terms always rule.
o Who was in a better position to allocate risks?
N b/c they deal w/ PSC all the time and change was foreseeable.
N assumes the risks.
The use of unforeseeable and foreseeable language
o Is non-economic and vague
o Just another way of saying that lower cost fact finder should avoid the loss
Wolftrap case – power outage after D had agreed to provide electricity, D refused to pay P for
no performance b/c K was not completed due to impossibility
Are power outages common? Of course, they’re foreseeable
General Rule for Foreseeability – relief only granted for unforeseeable events making it
impossible to perform
Why did law only give relief from unforeseeable events? Gives incentive for people to plan
for foreseeable events in K
Wolftrap had the lower information costs here, but court doesn’t see it that way b/c it
analyzes under the factual impossibility of K
Can take economic analysis approach of allocation of risks (third party insurance) or use
non-economic criterion (fair, reasonable, and just) of impracticability.
Fraud
o Introduction
Misrepresentation similar to fraud but it’s innocent, an error made in good faith
Effect of misrepresentation is rescission
Effect of fraud is damages or even punies
Fraud is more serious b/c it’s intentional misrepresentation
o Fraud and misrepresentation can lead to warranty claims and then to unconscionability
o 5 common law elements of fraud
30
False material representation, can be either false or non-disclosure where there is a duty
Concealment of truth, series of representations, silence in the face of duty
Of a past or existing fact
Parties are not held to prophecy, opinions don’t count b/c they’re not facts unless coming
from an expert
Scienter – knowing intent to defraud
Knowledge of falsity, reckless mistake or disregard for truth
o Justifiable reliance by the victim.
One who knows the truth or could discover the truth after reasonable inquiry can’t recover
Must be injury caused by the first four elements.
Not just upset, must be property injuries
o Types of Fraud
Fraud in the Inducement – enter into K by fraud or induce someone to enter through known
misrepresentations
Fraud in the Execution – get someone to sign a K that they don’t know is a K
Ex a pro football star is signing autographs, one of the documents is actually a K. No
intent to be bound, so no K
o Fraud is hard to prove but some courts let P’s by w/ “almost fraud” (Club Med case).
o Case Application
Fraud and Bal Fel v. Boyd
Fraud or almost fraud when little old dancing lady gets to recovery for her contract?
o Fraudulent inducement renders a K void.
Fraud is an investment in misinformation.
No clarity w/ fraud, no meeting of minds so we have no problem w/ excusing when
all elements are met (supra).
o Court in this case cites a breach of confidential relationship to be a basis for fraud
Isn’t that just almost fraud?
Doesn’t meet all elements but could argue some are met.
o Equitable result?
o Equity done when woman got all her money back plus the benefits of the dance lessons
she actually went to.
o She didn’t understand and evaluate her risks and now wants to externalize her costs.
o Was she injured?
She got what she paid for and what about her benefits received.
Benefits do come w/ costs.
Terms of K should rule unless one of the big 8 will excuse performance
o Incapacity (R 15) – probably not b/c no evidence of incapacity.
o Duress (R 175) – Unlawful or coercive? Threats of force or suit? Not here.
Econ. Duress – could be if there was a monopoly position.
o K is voidable for undue influence (Rest 177)
Gentle persuasion and abuse of close confidential personal relationship
Use age discrepancy and vulnerable status as widow to argue yes.
Maybe she wasn’t all that vulnerable: 56 years old, teacher, educated, world
experience – should have known better
Incapacity
o Person must be 18 to K legally (R 14)
31
Infants – until majority any contract which an infant enters into is voidable at her option.
(Majority set by statute)
Only voidABLE, not VOID – so minor may still go through w/ it but can always rescind it.
Even affects third parties to the transaction if minor voids the K.
o Mentally incompetent (R 15) – insane, mentally ill, senile, mentally retarded, or drunk (high).
Lacks capacity to K if either
Is unable to understand in a reasonable manner the nature and consequences of the
transaction
Is unable to act in a reasonable manner in relation to the transaction and the other party has
reason to know of his condition.
Intoxication
If person is intoxicated so that she can’t understand the nature of transaction and
The other party has reason to know that this is the case.
Avoidance
K’s made by incompetents are voidable, not void so K may be ratified if maker regains
capacity or has guardian appointed who acts in maker’s interest.
If K was made on fair terms and the other party is without knowledge of the mental illness,
the power of avoidance is terminated to the extent that the K has been performed
Illegality
o Neither party to an illegal K may enforce it
Applies even where only one party’s performance is illegal
Parties may get partial remedy on a partially performed K and also the K is divisible from the
illegal part (courts effort to salvage K).
o Types of illegal K’s
Gambling K
Those calling for bribes or those procured by a bribe.
Licensing requirements where one party to the K should be licensed but isn’t.
Duress
o Available if D can show that he was unfairly coerced into entering into the K or into modifying it.
Any wrongful act that overcomes the free will of a party.
Prevents meeting of minds.
o Methods of committing duress
Violence or threats of it
Imprisonment or threats of it
Wrongful taking or keeping of a party’s property or threats to do so.
Threats to breach a K or to commit other wrongful acts.
o Typically requires something more than charging a high price for something.
32
Words or conduct in creation of express warranty and those that limit warranty will be
construed together.
Exclusion or modification of implied warranty of merchantability doesn’t have to be
written, but limitation of implied warranty of fitness must be in writing and conspicuous.
Language like “as is” or “with all faults” must be called to B’s attention
o State Lemon Laws – attempted modification of warranty law designed to protect
consumers but really just provide false sense of security for a premium price. Defects are rarely
due to one specific problem and few people take advantage of the law but everyone pays for it.
o Hahn v. Ford – seller limited warranty on new auto.
Limit was on the time or mileage of auto and limited to consequential damages.
Sellers are allowed to do this under 2-314
Statutes require the limitations to be
In writing and
Conspicuous – dispute over exactly what is conspicuous (in hindsight or foresight).
2-316(3)(c) – Buyer may be able to know about implied warranty b/c of course of dealing
which would bring it to buyer’s attn.
In Hahn buyer testified that he knew of the warranty
Seller offered extended warranty so impliedly buyer should have asked about what was
included w/ standard warranty.
Unconscionability
o If terms of K are so grossly unfair, sometimes the court will allow the excusal of one party.
o A & M Produce – Machine doesn’t work and manufacturer disclaims all warranties (can do that
under 2-316 “as is” statement) but court finds disclaimer as unconscionable under 2-719(3)
o Cali defines it w/ a multi-part test
Procedural Unconscionability
Oppression status arising from inequality of bargaining power, which results in absence
of meaningful choice and no real negotiation
o Not real negotiation involved w/ K
o Absence of meaningful choice.
Surprise
Substantive Unconscionability
Commercially unreasonable
o No real negotiation
Why not in produce case?
Court: b/c of sophistication of parties (big v. small), and one has more economic muscle;
also buyer had no access to legal advice.
Argue against the court: Businesses take risks and produce company was not that small and
could have obtained counsel.
o Absence of meaningful choice
Form K that big firm throws out for other party to agree to (adhesion K?); take it or leave it no
meaningful negotiation
Argue other side: plenty of competition, P could go higher up in authority to negotiate K, not
necessarily higher transaction costs for negotiation b/c of technology.
o Always tested at the time the K was made, not when it was breached or performed
Means that the K must have been unfair when entered into.
Greatest indicator is the superior bargaining power of one party over another.
Products Liability (Relationship w/ Unconscionability)
33
o Long March to liability:
Contract Fraud Misrepresentation Warranty Unconscionability Products Liability
o Short march to liability: provides insurance rather than allocation of risk
InjuryFaultLiability
o Problem is that prod liability gives damages for all and warranty is more limited.
o Possibilities for determining liability
R. 402(a) of Torts- Products liability- not applied when the only loss is economic damages. Is
product defective or unreasonably dangerous in design or manufacture. Form of “contort” that
provides no fault insurance instead of allocating risk.
Reasonable Alternative Design- not a feasible alternative because there is always going to be a
more expensive, safer way to make any product. Since resources are scarce,
there can never be this nirvana. Amounts to a no fault insurance policy for everyone that is a
consumer
Risk/Utility Test- What is the risk of accident or injury compared to the cost of alternative
design. If the benefit in safety is even slightly higher than the cost to provide the safety, the
product should be redesigned to meet the benefit.
The cost of making the product safer must be less than the gravity of the injury multiplied
by the probability of its occurrence for liability to be imposed (Cost<Gravity x Probability)
Considerations
o The nature of product
o Probability of occurrence
o Cost of manufacturer to achieve safety (Hand formula)
o Magnitude of injury to the consumer
o Precautions that could be taken by consumer
o The impact corrective measures taken by manufacturer would have on the consumer
Absolute liability is proper when:
o The product is simple
o There is a low incidence of the accident’s occurrence
o Cost to manufacturer is high to achieve a small increase in level of safety
o The injury is minor
o Nothing consumer could do to prevent injury
o Slight increase in cost that won’t prevent future sales
Consumer Expectations Test- failure because all consumers will never be satisfied, especially
if the product has caused them harm. Manufacturers do not agree to uniform expectations so
planning ahead is impossible
o Delaval Case—Suit for defective turbines
Court decides case under Torts 402A
Under K: product liability for commercial damages—general rule is that you can’t sue if
product doesn’t perform as warranted
Damages: K under Hadley would be reasonably foreseeable losses and would be difficult to
calculate
Damages: Tort you see if product is defective then follow the flow of what damages ensue as a
result
34
o Goal of rules of performance is to protect the expectation that the other party will perform against
a possible failure of the other party to perform. Rules seek to make remedies other than a lawsuit.
Conditions – an event that must occur before performance of a contractual duty becomes due.
Constructive conditions – court supplies terms under which a party’s duties are conditioned on
the performance to be given in return. For example, a house painter promises to paint a house
for $1000. Although the language of the contract doesn’t make the owner’s promise to pay
conditional on the painter’s performance, when the painter is finished, payment is due.
Impracticability and Frustration are bases for failure to perform.
Conditions
o Definition of a condition
A condition is an event, the occurrence or nonoccurrence of which will create, limit, or
extinguish the absolute duty to perform; is a promise modifier.
Distinguish from a promise: A promise is a commitment to do or not do something, can be
based on a condition or not.
Whether a promise or condition is based on the “intent of the parties”
Use of words such as “if” “on condition that” “unless” usually indicate a condition.
Importance of distinction
Failure of a promise = a right to recover damages and a breach of the K.
Failure of a condition = relieves a party of the obligation to perform.
The fact that an act is a condition does not by itself make it a promise.
Courts prefer to interpret as a promise rather than a condition.
o Classification of Conditions
Classification as to time
Condition precedent (before) – Trigger to a K obligation, what happens that will trigger A’s
performance if B meets the condition.
o Ex. A agrees to sell his house to B if B gets financing.
Condition subsequent (After) – After the K a condition that if not met will blow up the K.
(Cuts off an already existing duty of performance)
o Ex. Football player K that is voidable if player gets injured after season starts and K is
in effect.
Concurrent conditions – Mutually dependant conditions, to be performed at the same point
in time
o Most car sales, give salesman the money, he gives you the car.
Classification as to form
Express conditions – usually require strict compliance
o Includes satisfactory performance as a condition to performance – obligee must be
satisfied w/ work b-4 he pays.
o Measured w/ an objective standard to keep the obligee from being too over stringent.
(K may provide for subjective terms)
o Standard is: Work that a reasonable skillful worker would have performed in a like
manner w/ standards of the industry.
Implied / Inherent / Constructive – Implied conditions are found w/in the K and
circumstances surrounding it, constructive conditions are supplied by the court to ensure
that the parties get what they bargain for.
o Constructive conditions may relate to who performs first.
Implications of whether a condition is met or excused
A duty of performance becomes absolute when conditions are either performed or excused.
Performed is obvious; excusal can come in a variety of ways.
35
o Failure to cooperate – a party who wrongfully prevents a condition from occurring will
no longer be given the benefit of that condition.
o Actual material breach – the breach of one party excuses the other from performing his
condition or performance (breach has to be material to extinguish duty – a minor
breach will only suspend it).
o Anticipatory repudiation – must be unequivocal and applies only if there are
unperformed duties on both sides of the bargain; leaves the non-repudiating party w/
options to wait or sue now. Repudiation may be retracted until the non-repudiating
party has accepted the repudiation or detrimentally relied upon it.
o Prospective inability to perform – serious doubts by one party that the other will be
able to perform judged by a RPP standard. Doubting party may suspend her own
performance until she gets some meaningful assurance.
o Substantial performance – if party has substantially performed but breaches in some
minor way then the other may not completely be excused.
o Divisibility – when a K is divisible so are the conditions.
Conditions, if satisfied, result in duties. A party wishing to avoid performance must have
the duty discharged by one of the “big 8” above.
Nonperformance
o Nonperformance – nothing less than full performance operates as a discharge. However,
nonperformance is not necessarily a breach; it can be justified. When performance is due, any
failure to render it is a breach.
o Constructive conditions of Exchange – if the only consequence for a party’s nonperformance were
breach, a party of a bilateral contract would have little assurance of receiving the promised return
performance. In a bilateral contract, the promises are the stock of the contract. No mention is
made of the conditions required for one party to satisfy his portion of the contract so the court will
insert the condition.
o Concurrent Conditions – where parties are to perform at the same time rather than one after
another. Tender of the goods by the seller and tender of the payment by the buyer are concurrent
conditions (UCC § 2-507)
Tender – an offer coupled with the present ability to fulfill all the conditions resting on the
tendering party (UCC § 2-503)
A party that requires concurrent performance must still make an effort to perform before
bringing an action for breach. Mutual abandonment will be considered an agreement of
rescission.
o Order of Performance – determines the amount of security that the concept of constructive
conditions of exchange can afford. How order is determined:
Language of the agreement (most common in transfers of goods sold on credit and delivered
before full payment)
Return performances are rendered simultaneously, they are due simultaneously
Sometimes a lapse of time is necessary (construction contracts- the buyer will not pay until the
house is finished)
Performance at one time rather than partial payment over a period of time
o Methods the court has used to avoid the forfeiture that might otherwise result from the concept of
constructive conditions of exchange
Substantial performance as a means of avoiding forfeiture – a purchaser should not be allowed
to resist paying on the grounds of an insubstantial breach by the seller. Only substantial
performance (question of fact) is required of the first parry before that party can recover under
the contract. Look to the injured party to attempt to gauge the loss suffered, then look to the
breaching party to determine whether the performance has been substantial.
36
Perfect Tender Rule – buyer is entitled to reject goods unless the seller made a perfect
tender, there is no room for substantial performance.
Divisibility as a Means of Avoiding Forfeiture – a contract can be severed to avoid forfeiture.
A contract can be severed if the performances to be exchanged can be divided into
corresponding pairs of part performances in such a way that the court will treat the parts of
pairs as if the parties had agreed that they were equivalents. It must be proper to apportion the
party’s performances into corresponding pairs of part performances and it must be proper to
regard the parts as agreed equivalents
Apportionment – met if the price for parts of performance can be determined.
Agreed equivalents – look to parties’ intention or language of the contract. Rare for parties
to intend for contract to be divided, so must look to see that the portion of the contract to
be separated is proportional to the value that that portion of the contract provided.
Restitution as Means of Avoiding Forfeiture – party that cannot recover on the contract for
substantial performance can recover for any benefit conferred, less damage for which that
party is liable because of breach. More prevalent in employment or building contracts than in
sales for goods.
Responses to Breach by Nonperformance
o Power to suspend performance and to terminate the contract- does a breach justify the non-
breaching party in exercising a right to self-help by terminating the contract and refusing either to
render any remaining performance or to accept any further performance by the party in breach.
Liability is imposed on the first party in time to have committed the material breach.
Damages for Total breach- the injured party’s claim for damages for total breach takes the
place of its remaining substantive rights under the contract. Damages are calculated based on
assumption that neither party will render any remaining performance.
Damages for Partial Breach occurs if the injured party does not terminate the contract. The
injured party retains a right for damages flowing from the partial breach and the remaining
substantive rights under the contract. Damages are calculated on the assumption that both
parties will continue to perform despite the breach.
There is risk in splitting the action because if one portion of the breach is litigated, the
claim is precluded from being brought again.
Breach when conditions are concurrent- one party must tender their part of performance to
bring an action against the other party. On tender, the injured party is excused from
performing and has a claim for damages for total breach.
o Material Breach and Suspension- converse of the substantial performance doctrine
Breach is material when it justifies the injured party’s suspension of performance and amounts
to the nonoccurrence of a constructive condition of exchange. The injured party doesn’t have
to suspend, but may continue to perform and claim damages for partial breach. By suspending
for an immaterial breach, the suspending party is in breach.
Determination whether breach is material is a question of fact and relates to the time of breach,
not the time the contract was made.
o Cure- even though the breach is serious enough to justify the injured party’s suspending
performance, the party in breach can cure the breach by correcting the deficiency in performance.
Two situations in which cure is allowed:
The time for performance has not yet expired at the time the buyer rejects the seller (can be
cured within time for performance)
After the time for performance has expired and the seller had reasonable grounds to believe
that the goods would be acceptable (can be cured within a reasonable time to tender acceptable
goods as evidenced by prior dealings, usage of trade
o Total breach and Termination- although material breach justifies the injured party in exercising a
right to self-help by suspending performance, the injured party cannot necessarily terminate the
37
contract. Usually, there must be a reasonable passage of time before contract can be terminated
(reasonable determined as a question of fact)
Courts tolerate more delay by the breaching party when the breach occurs after the party has
relied on the contract by performance.
Also, more lenient on the part of a seller of specially manufactured goods than the part of a
seller with readily resellable goods. Purpose is to give the breaching party a chance to cure.
Time for cure also is determined by the nature of the contract. Sale of goods are treated
differently (less time) than the sale of land or for services (more time).
Prospective Nonperformance
o Anticipatory Repudiation as breach- effects of party’s repudiation before the time for performance
has arrived. Anticipatory repudiation discharges any remaining duties of performance of the
injured party. They no longer have to be ready to perform. However, repudiation of a duty does
not operate as a breach if it occurs after the repudiating party has received all of the agreed
exchange for that duty. In this situation, the injured party must wait until time for performance to
sue for damages. Courts have refused to apply the doctrine when a party repudiates a unilateral or
bilateral contract that has been fully performed by the injured party.
o What constitutes repudiation?
A manifestation from one party to another that the first party will not perform at least some of
its obligations under the contract.
Statement made in words or conduct that the repudiating party cannot or will not perform.
Parties’ expression of doubt as to willingness or ability to perform is not repudiation.
Good faith mistakes concerning rights under the contract are irrelevant.
o Responses to repudiation
Treat contract as terminated and bring suit for damages for total breach
Urge the repudiating party to perform or urge that party to retract its repudiation
Ignore repudiation and await the time for the return performance
Assignments
o Obligee assigns her rights to the assignee, who is now the one who receives rights from the
obligor.
Assignment = Transfer of RIGHTS (benefits of K)
Delegation = Transfer of DUTIES (obligations to perform but usually the benefits thereof).
o C is obligated to perform for A, A assigns his rights under the K to B.
No consideration is needed for the tx of rights to B.
All of A’s (assignor) rights are extinguished under the K but he is not off the hook.
If A owes a return promise to C and B does not perform in A’s stead then C can sue A.
o Irrevocability of assignments
Assignments are irrevocable
However, if any consideration is given by B to A in order to get benefits from C then the
assignment is irrevocable.
o Effect of notice on assignment
If obligor has notice he has to for sure pay $ to assignee, not the assignor.
Different jurisdiction go different ways: some say that if obligor pays the assignor then he
must still pay the assignee (as opposed to requiring the assignee to go against the assignor for
the payment he received from obligor).
o Subsequent assignments
What if A assigns K to B but also to C, D and E?
38
2 rules in differing jurisdiction
The first assignee to give notice prevails
First to obtain assignment prevails.
Additional thoughts
If assignment is made irrevocable (i.e. consideration paid) that subsequent assignment will
take precedence over previous gratuitous assignments as the gratuitous assignments are
revocable.
Delegations
o Y (Obligor/delegator) promises to perform for X (the obligee). Then Y decides to transfer her
duty to perform to Z (delegate).
o What duties may be delegated
Generally all except:
Duties involving personal judgment and skill.
Delegations that would change the obligee’s expectancy.
Special trust reposed in delegator by the other party
Contractual restriction on delegation.
o Effect of delegation
Delegator remains liable to obligee (b/c if not then a solvent delegator could regularly transfer
his duties to an insolvent delegate).
BUT – obligee may agree (through novation) to accept the performance of the delegate in
place of the delegator. This releases delegator from all liability.
o Requires the obligee to expressly accept the delegate’s performance in lieu of the
delegator, mere consent not enough.
Delegation agreement may be one of two forms:
Delegator may simply give the delegate the option to perform and the delegate makes no
promise that he will do so.
o Delegate has no liability to either the delegator or the obligee if he does not perform.
Delegate may promise that he will perform.
o Is liable to delegator and possible the obligee, if the obligee is a3rd party beneficiary of
the K.
o Promise may be made strictly for the benefit of the delegator, in which situation no
liability to obligee.
Third party Beneficiaries
o A (the promisee) K’s w/ B (the promisor) that B will render some performance to C (the 3rd party
beneficiary).
Issue is: who may sue? A who was to receive no benefit any way or C who was shortchanged.
Classification of beneficiaries.
Intended beneficiaries – the class of beneficiary who may sue and recover b/c they were
intended to receive some benefit from the deal.
Incidental beneficiaries – May not sue as a damaged party.
o Intended beneficiaries – Creditors and donees
Creditors – a person to whom a debt is owed by the promisee
Donee – a gift was to be received from the promisee.
If performance runs directly from the promisor to the 3d party then the beneficiary is probably
intended, if not probably incidental.
Best test is the intent of the promisee, did she intend to benefit the 3d party?
o Incidental beneficiaries – those who stand to profit from the deal but who were not intended to do
so in the making of the K.
Ex. Land next door to a hotel deal that fell through is a third party incidental beneficiary.
39
Although he may have gained from the deal he has not right to sue and collect as he wasn’t
intended to profit.
o When does a beneficiary acquire K rights?
Only when those rights have vested.
Beneficiary manifests assent to a promise in the manner requested by the parties.
Brings suit to enforce the promise
Materially changes position in justifiable reliance on the promise.
Prior to vesting the promisee and promisor are entitled to modify or rescind the beneficiary’s
rights under the K.
If beneficiary has no idea of the K she obviously has no rights.
o Who can sue whom?
Beneficiary may sue the promisor on the K
Promisor may use all defenses which he could have used against he promisee.
Beneficiary v. Promisee
ONLY in the creditor situation on the existing obligation b/w them.
A gratuitous beneficiary has no right to sue unless there is grounds for reliance §90
damages.
Promisee v. promisor
Promisee may sue promisor both at law and in equity for specific performance if the
promisor is not performing for the third person.
40