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© 2002, by William A. Markham
You can review our experience in commercial contracts here.
The Extraordinary Importance of Contract Law. Contract law lies at the heart of our system of laws and serves as the foundation
of our entire society. This is not an exaggeration. It is a simple
observation - one that too often goes unobserved.
Our society depends upon free exchange in the marketplace at every
level. Contract law makes this possible. Exchanges in the marketplace
always depend upon voluntary agreements between individuals or other
"legal persons". Such voluntary agreements could never
work without contract law.
Contract law serves to make these agreements "enforceable",
which usually means that it allows one party to a contract to obtain
money damages from the other party upon showing that the latter
stands in breach.
Without contract law, these voluntary agreements would instantly
become impractical and unworkable. Since such agreements lie at
the very heart of our society and economy, and since they depend
upon contract law, it is no exaggeration to say, as I have just
done, that "contract law lies at the heart of our system of
laws and serves as the foundation of our entire society." Those
were the very words that I used to begin this essay.
Stated more precisely, it is our system of contract law that underpins
and makes possible the many private, voluntary agreements by which
exchanges of goods and services are accomplished in our society
at every level. No exchange is exempt from the contract law, which
indeed can be rightly called the cornerstone of marketplace civilization.
In this article, I will briefly explain the different types of
contracts that can be made, paying special attention to the common
problems that arise in their formulation. I will also discuss how
contracts are enforced or avoided, and how a wronged party to a
contract can obtain recompense and other relief from the wrongdoing
party. I will explain the principle of good faith, which in California
is known as the "covenant of good faith and fair dealing",
and which has been too often overlooked by commentators and practitioners
alike.
I do not aim to provide a comprehensive explanation of all the
theoretical and practical difficulties. This is an overview, not
an exhaustive treatise. Sometimes the overview will better help
the reader understand the essential points, or the "forest"
if you will, while the treatise is better for explaining the many
intricacies and complexities that can be rightly called the "trees"
of contract law.
Definition of a Contract. A contract is nothing other than
a voluntary, private agreement to exchange valuable things. It most
often is an exchange of valuable promises. For example, a home-buyer
might promise to pay $250,000 to the seller, who in exchange promises
to deliver unencumbered title to the buyer.
Good Faith and Fair Dealing. Most exchanges are straightforward
matters that are self-executing and done without any problem at
all. When I buy a cup of coffee at my local cafe (which I have just
done so that I may enjoy it while I compose the present essay on
my laptop), the cafe and I have made a self-executing exchange,
which we have done without a hitch.
Ditto, if I buy a book at the local bookstore or have my car washed
at the local car-wash. Ditto again, if I purchase airplane tickets
from a travel agent, or have my house painted, or have my teeth
cleaned at the dentist's office.
Fortunately, most exchanges are performed on the spot to everyone's
satisfaction. Were this otherwise, our society and general commerce
would soon become choked by controversy and disputes. Thus it may
be said that our system depends above all on the good faith and
honesty of our people. Indeed, the principle of "good faith"
is central to contract law.
Every contract made or performed in California is said to include
an implied-in-law covenant of good faith and fair dealing, by which
each party to the contract agrees to act in good faith and deal
fairly with the other. This has been construed to mean that one
party to a contract should not try in bad faith to cheat the other
party of the benefit of the bargain made by the contract.
Inevitable Complications and Controversies . While most
exchanges are performed without incident, not all of them are, as
we all know. This is true even in the simplest of matters (e.g.,
the sale of a cup of coffee) and is even more likely in a complicated
transaction (e.g., the financing, delivery, and insurance of commercial
aircraft to an overseas company over a thirty-year term).
Let us take a simple example first. I will list only a few of the
problems that might arise from a simple contract for a one-time
sale of a single box of tomatoes. If you offer to give me $10 for
a carton of tomatoes that I have sitting on a table behind me, and
if I agree to accept it as payment in full for the tomatoes, we
have made an oral contract that we can perform on the spot: You
hand me the $10 bill, and I give you the carton. Nothing more simple
or straightforward, right? But what if you discover that my tomatoes
were too ripe when you bought them, and that they all go rotten
within two hours of the purchase? What if I take your $10 bill,
but then refuse to give the box of tomatoes, telling you to "beat
it, scram, or else you'll get hurt!" What happens if your $10
bill turns out to be counterfeit, or if you take the tomatoes but
refuse to pay, or pay with a check that you later cancel or that
is returned unpaid by the bank? What if the carton breaks while
you are carrying it, and all the tomatoes fall to the ground and
are ruined? What if you needed these tomatoes for the dinner you
meant to make for your boss, who, in disappointment, decides not
to give you the promotion he had earlier discussed with you? My
point is only that problems can and often do arise in even the simplest,
easiest exchanges.
In more complicated transactions, the possible difficulties are
varied and sometimes difficult for the parties even to envision
at the outset, much less address in an intelligent, orderly manner.
Let's consider one such example. Suppose a large American company
makes a contract with a large foreign company by which it becomes
obliged to design, deliver, and insure an entire generation of commercial
aircraft over a thirty-year period. The possible complications might
take me literally years to ponder, list, analyze, and explain. It
could take a decade or longer for feuding teams of lawyers in several
countries to sort out the possible complications that might arise.
To avoid such controversy, which results in burdensome attorney's
fees and an equally burdensome devotion of attention and effort
that could be better employed at more constructive endeavors, it
is necessary to have a proper contract in place at the outset: If
the exchange is to be done on the spot and simultaneously, a written
contract need not be used, but the parties should either reasonably
trust one another's good faith or have an exact understanding of
the exchange before they undertake it. If the exchange cannot be
performed in full on the spot, there should be a written contract
to state the parties' obligations and the essential terms of the
exchange. A good written contract will also address at least the
most likely complications that might arise, assigning responsibility
for any such complication to specific parties in specific manner.
A good written contract is one that clearly describes the exchange
to be done and also addresses the possible complications that might
arise during the performance of the exchange.
Different Kinds of Contracts. I earlier provided a simple
definition of a contract. Here is a more technical definition: A
contract is a private compact, voluntarily made, by which the parties
agree to exchange valuable things with one another. A contract comes
into existence when (1) one party makes an offer that the
other party accepts, and (2) the parties thereby agree to
exchange valuable benefits on specified terms and conditions, with
reasonably specific agreement on the price, place, time, and
other essential terms of the exchange.
Let us consider three different examples, so that this point can
be illustrated clearly.
First Example: An Oral Contract. Suppose that I offer to
pay you $1000 to proof-read this article and offer constructive
criticism on how it might be made more useful or enjoyable to my
probable audience. I further specify that I want you to state your
criticisms in writing to me no later than "next week Thursday",
whereupon I will pay you in full. If you agree to these terms, perhaps
by saying "I accept your offer", we have made an oral
contract by which I have promised to pay you $1000 next week Thursday,
on condition that you give me your editorial comments in writing
on that date.
But no contract would have been made if you had instead stated
the following: "I agree to everything, except the price, which
is too low for such important work on your extraordinary article!
I propose to do the work for $10,000." In this event, you would
have made a counter-offer, which is really a rejection of
the offer and the proposing of a new offer in its place. I could
then accept your counteroffer, thereby making a oral contract, or
I could make some new counteroffer, which would be a rejection of
your last offer, but with a new offer to you, or I could decide
that there is no point in continuing to negotiate with you, in which
case I would reject your offer and discontinue or terminate the
effort to negotiate a contract. But to return to my example of a
binding contract, suppose that we finally agree upon the exact terms
of my paying you to proofread this article. We have in this instance
made a binding oral contract.
Second Example: Implied Contract/Unilateral Performance. Now
let's consider a second example. If I pay $1.50 in exchange for
a cup of coffee given to me by the serving-person at my local cafe,
a contract has been made and performed on the spot: The parties
to the contract are the cafe and me. We have impliedly agreed that
I will pay the $1.50, and that in exchange the serving person will
make and give me a fresh cup of coffee that I may consume at leisure
on the premises. I have given a valuable benefit (ready money) in
direct exchange for another valuable benefit (a fresh cup of coffee
that I can enjoy at leisure in a cafe).
In this case, the cafe and I have not merely made a contract, but
have performed it on the spot. Since we did not actually haggle
over the terms of the exchange, we have performed a unilateral
contract: The cafe has in effect said to all comers, "If
you approach our counter and order food or beverage at the prices
stated on our menu, we will furnish you the food or beverage that
you order, on condition that you pay for it on the spot. You may
then consume your food or beverage at leisure on our premises."
In response to this open offer to all comers, I have taken the
unilateral action of approaching the serving-person to order the
coffee. My unilateral action of ordering a cup of coffee sets into
motion the immediate performance of the exchange. The actual terms
of the contract are implied by the cafe's posting of its prices,
my own conduct, and the ensuing, simultaneous exchange.
Third Example: Written Contract. For our third example,
let's consider consider a more complicated contract that by its
very nature requires a comprehensive written agreement. Suppose
that a huge multinational corporation seeks to sell fighter aircraft
to the United States Air Force, which is predisposed to meet its
military needs by purchasing this aircraft. The two parties contemplate
that the seller will help to design the aircraft, manufacture it,
deliver it on a specified schedule, and provide insurance for it.
Suppose that the Air Force agrees in principle to pay at least $417
billion dollars for this aircraft over a ten-year period. The negotiations
themselves will last for months, if not years. Offers, counter-offers,
and term sheets will abound. Both parties will employ elite attorneys
to compose a master contract and ancillary documents that will supposedly
explain the transactions and address each possible problem that
might arise during their performance. The ensuing documents, which
will likely fill a large room, will collectively constitute the
enormous written contract by which the entire arrangement is to
be performed.
In each example given above, the parties have agreed to exchange
valuable benefits on specified terms and conditions (in the first
example, I have also tried to show how contracts are sometimes proposed,
but rejected by parties who exchange counteroffers but never reach
a definitive binding offer-and-acceptance). A lay-reader might think
at first glance that my third example (the Air Force contract) is
somehow a more formal, more binding contract than the first two
examples (the proof-reading contract and the cafe contract). But
this would be a mistaken conclusion: In all three examples the parties
have made a binding, enforceable contract, by which each has agreed
to give something of value in exchange for getting something of
value. The only difference lies in the complexity of the exchange,
not in its character.
The essential principle of every contract, no matter how large
or small, is the giving of something in exchange for the getting
of something. Typically, one "gives" a promise to
do something, and in exchange "gets" a promise from someone
else to do something.
Contracts can be stated in writing, in which event they are called
written contracts. Or they can be made by oral agreement,
whereupon they are called oral contracts. Or they can arise
by implication, in which case they are said to be implied contracts.
These then are the three different kinds of contract - written,
oral, and implied.
Usually the parties to a written contract understand that they
have entered into a binding agreement, but they do not always grasp
this point when making an oral or implied contract. But the law
never ignores this circumstance, nor is a party's ignorance of this
"legal fact" an excuse that can be plead as a defense
in court. If I offer to pay you $25 tomorrow for a carton of tomatoes,
and if you accept my promise and bring me the carton at the appointed
place and time, I commit a breach of oral contract if I refuse to
pay the $25 for them. It matters nothing that we made no written
agreement. We made an oral one, and you can seek damages for its
breach in court if you so desire.
But it is always harder to prove the terms of an oral or implied
contract than those of a written one. A written contract can "speak
for itself". The terms of an oral contract can only be recounted
by the parties themselves or other witnesses to the transaction.
Their testimony can often be contradicted or is sometimes self-contradictory
or implausible on its face. Even when the testimony is the absolute
gospel truth, it might not be believed by a skeptical judge or jury,
or it might be cynically discredited by a shrewd trial lawyer.
It is for this reason that written contracts should be used in
exchanges that are not to be performed on the spot.
A written contract can be a simple recitation of a straightforward
exchange, or it can be longer and more complicated. The parties
themselves decide what will be stated in it, subject only to certain
laws that will be addressed below.
For more complicated transactions, such as our Air Force example
given above, the parties will invariably use a complicated, lengthy
contract or often a series of such contracts: Such monumental works
can take months or even years to compose, and far longer to decipher
when the whole transaction unravels years later, as all too often
occurs in the real world. Contracts of this kind usually include
all manner of legal devices or drafter's tools to describe the manifold
transactions and especially to allocate responsibility and risk.
This said, there is one point that is more important than all the
others. Every written contract, no matter how complicated or convoluted,
is at bottom a statement of a private, voluntary agreement to exchange
valuable benefits.
Various Devices Used in Written Contracts. Written contracts
often employ various "devices" or "drafter's tools"
to explain the exchange more fully and to allocate responsibility
and risk for the possible complications might arise, as I have mentioned
just above. (You may skip this section if you do not wish to wish
to read about such "devices").
Here is a very imperfect listing and brief explanation of the most
commonly used devices:
-- A preamble or recitation of recitals is never obligatory,
but is often useful, so that the nature and purpose of the transaction
can be stated expressly. These serve to explain and clarify the
contract whose proper meaning is later disputed. This matter is
discussed below.
-- A covenant is merely a statement of an obligation or
duty that the covenantor promises to observe for the benefit of
the covenantee. Covenants are often used in real estate contracts
and are meant often to become "covenants that run with the
land" (i.e., obligations that burden the land even after it
is passed from the original covenantor to a new purchaser who never
personally made any covenant to do anything, but who is bound by
the covenant merely because he has succeeded to title to the land).
-- A provision is merely an express statement of rights
or responsibilities that has special importance to one or more of
the parties (e.g., an "opt-out provision").
-- A condition precedent is the statement of a prerequisite
event or circumstance that must occur or arise before a stated obligation
becomes binding (e.g., "the company must deliver 47 widgets
each Wednesday of any week in which the quoted price of widgets
in Chicago on Monday is above $4 per widget" - which means
that a condition precedent to the company's obligation to ship the
widgets on Wednesday is that the market-price for widgets in Chicago
on Monday is at least $4 per widget).
-- A condition subsequent is the statement of an event or
circumstance whose occurrence extinguishes or modifies an obligation
(e.g., "the company must deliver 47 widgets each Wednesday
to Smithers until the market price of widgets in Chicago falls below
$4 per widget, whereupon this contract shall become voidable at
the company's expense" - which means that the company acquires
the right but not the duty to cancel the contract upon the condition
subsequent of the fall of the market price to below $4 per widget).
-- A condition concurrent is the statement of a condition
that must be satisfied at the very time the obligation is owed,
else the obligation is not owed at all. Most escrow transactions
employ such conditions (e.g., "the purchaser will place $400,000
in escrow; a condition concurrent will be that the seller will place
his title to the property in escrow).
-- Express representations are statements of material fact,
made by one party to induce the other to agree to the contract.
Often these are oral statements made during negotiations. Sometimes
a prudent party will insist that representation be recited in the
contract itself and declared to be a "material inducement"
to the agreement. If the representation later proves to have been
misleading or inaccurate, the party who relied on it might have
a claim for misrepresentation (intentional or negligent). This matter
is discussed below.
-- Disclaimers are express disavowals of responsibility,
as in "the company disclaims (disavows) any responsibility
for any harm that any of its widgets might cause to Smithers, his
business or his property".
-- Exclusions, which are often employed in insurance contracts,
are used to remove certain kinds of obligations from the contract
that otherwise might be deemed to be required by it (e.g., "the
insurance company will pay for all harm caused to the structure
by fire, unless the fire was caused by natural disaster or set on
purpose by an arsonist" - in this instance, it is the phrase
that begins with the word "unless" that states the exclusion
to the general obligation).
-- A warranty is a guarantee of a condition or circumstance
that is material to the contract (e.g., the company warrants that
its widgets shall be fit for use in widget-grinders", or "the
automobile is warranted to remain in good repair for seven years
or the first 100,000 miles of driving, whichever comes first").
Typically, the warrantor must pay for harm caused if the warranty
is not met.
-- An indemnity is the grant of reimbursement upon the occurrence
of a condition subsequent. Stated differently, a party might become
entitled to reimbursement upon the occurrence of a condition precedent!
The condition, whether it be deemed subsequent or precedent, is
some sort of loss suffered by the party entitled to indemnification
(e.g., "if the company fails to deliver the widgets by next
week Wednesday, and Smithers thereupon purchases widgets from another
vendor, the company must indemnify Smithers for his general and
incidental damages" - this example being particularly instructive,
as it is an express indemnity for contract damages that shows an
indemnity clause at work and leads us to our next subject, which
is the matter of damages upon the breach of a contract). Indemnities
tend to include specific procedures that must be followed in order
to obtain the indemnification on offer. The law of indemnification
is fundamental to insurance contracts and more generally to the
allocation of commercial risk. It is a highly evolved body of law
that requires special study in order to be practiced with competence.
-- A release is a formal renunciation and binding forfeiture
of a right or claim (e.g., "Smithers releases the company from
any claim that it might otherwise have for misperformance of any
obligation owed or arguably owed before the date of signing of this
contract").
-- Litigation procedures are special provisions by which
the parties agree in advance on the resolution of any subsequent
dispute arising from the performance of the contract. Parties typically
specify which law governs interpretation and enforcement of the
contract (e.g., "the contract is to be governed by California
law"). The parties sometimes require that any dispute arising
between them first be submitted to mediation and afterwards to private
arbitration in lieu of a courtroom litigation. Other times they
specify that any lawsuit must be instituted in a particular place
(e.g., "venue shall be in San Diego County").
The important point is that the parties themselves can insert
in their contract whatever they choose, so long as their purpose
or the mechanism chosen is not illegal or otherwise contrary to
local public policy. The above-listed devices are merely means of
stating and refining the agreement that the parties mean to make
with one another.
These devices are used all the time in written contracts, but only
rarely in oral or implied ones, which instead tend to be straightforward
or simple exchanges that usually are performed on the spot or are
made by parties who implicitly trust one another or otherwise have
no reason to suspect that the mutual obligations are unclear or
could be misconstrued.
Written contracts, in contrast, tend to make liberal use of these
different devices, which I have tried to touch upon briefly above.
The inartful or excessive use of such devices in written contracts
can lead to unwelcome confusion. It is no stretch to say that
some written contracts are so complicated that either (1) no one
alive really understands their entire meaning or ramifications,
or (2) they are at best understood only by teams of attorneys who
have labored for months on end to prepare and implement them. I
personally have had the honor, or misfortune if you prefer, to litigate
controversies arising from such contracts, which at first glance
are less comprehensible than ancient tomes written in Old Sanskrit!
But patience, past experience, and joyless effort allow most seasoned
lawyers to make sense of these unwieldy monsters, or at least as
much sense as is humanly possible to make of them!
A truly well-done contract is one that takes any transaction,
no matter how complicated, and states it in simple, unambiguous
terms that are instantly understood by everyone and cannot be misinterpreted
by anyone. Good contacts will employ some or all of the above devices,
but will do so sensibly and intelligibly.
Controversies and Remedies. If one party to a contract wishes
to complain that the other has failed to perform or has misperformed,
he can assert that the non-performing or misperforming party has
committed a breach of the contract. A breach is said to occur when
one party to a contract fails or refuses without proper excuse to
perform a "material" term or condition of the contract
in a satisfactory or timely manner.
If such a breach occurs and causes proximate harm to the wronged
party, the offending party becomes liable at law for a breach of
contract. Stated more exactly, the wronged party can bring suit
against the offending party if he pleads that (1) a contract (oral,
written or implied) was formed between the two of them; (2) the
wronged party performed his own obligations under the contract or
has been excused by the other party's malfeasance from performing
them; (3) the offending party failed or refused to perform at least
one material term or condition of the contract in a reasonable or
timely manner; and (4) by so failing to perform, the offending party
caused proximate injury or harm to the wronged party.
If an aggrieved party prevails on a claim for breach of contract,
his remedies are limited ordinarily to monetary damages, which is
to say, money recompense. The ordinary measure of monetary damages
is such amount of money as is necessary to place the aggrieved party
in the position in which he would have been, had the offending party
timely performed the contract in proper manner.
Another way of stating this formula is to say that the aggrieved
party, upon proving the breach, is entitled to the benefit of his
bargain, but not usually to specific performance of the bargain
itself.
Suppose that I make a contract with you by which I am to deliver
a box of tomatoes to you next week Thursday before noon at your
restaurant, and you are to pay me $15 for the product thus delivered.
But on the Thursday in question I discover that the spot market
for tomatoes has risen spectacularly, to $50 per box. I decide to
sell all my boxes on the spot market and therefore fail to deliver
the promised box to you, who were prepared to pay me the promised
$15 for it. But you need a box of tomatoes for your restaurant,
so you purchase one on the spot market that day for $50. On these
facts, you have an open-and-shut claim against me for breach of
contract, since I breached (broke) the above contract, doing so
obviously and willfully. Your damages against me will be such money
as will put you in as good a position as you would have enjoyed
had I faithfully performed the contract - which in this instance
is (1) the difference between what you were supposed to pay me for
a box of tomatoes and what you had to pay on the spot market after
I failed to deliver the product; and (2) any incidental expense
that you reasonably incurred so that you could make the replacement
purchase - for example, the taxi fare you might have incurred to
drive to the tomato stand at the other end of town, etc. In this
example, the difference in price is called direct damages
- the harm that you directly suffered as a direct consequence of
my breach; the taxi fare is called incidental damages, as
it was an expense that you incidentally incurred while making replacement
arrangements.
Ordinarily, direct damages and incidental damages serve to give
the aggrieved party the benefit of his bargain, placing him
in the position that he would have enjoyed had the offending party
performed rather than breached the contract. Interest on these sums
is also given, since there is often a long interval between the
suffering of harm and the award of recompense (the aggrieved party
must complain to the offending party, and usually must bring suit,
etc.).
In some cases an aggrieved party cannot have the benefit of his
bargain if he receives only direct and incidental damages. Sometimes
the aggrieved party may properly seek consequential damages,
which are losses suffered in foreseeable consequence of the
breach. Such damages can greatly exceed the value of the contract
(it is therefore advisable to disclaim responsibility for consequential
damages so far as the law allows).
If I make a contract with my local dry-cleaner by which it agrees
to dry-clean my dress shirts and suits, and if it thereafter breaches
the contract by ruining rather than properly cleaning my clothing,
I am almost certainly entitled to a recovery of the money I will
need to buy brand new clothing of comparable quality, as well as
reasonable incidental expenses incurred to make these new purchases
(such money recompenses me for my direct and incidental damages).
But can I argue that in consequence of the breach, I did not have
a proper suit to wear to an all-important meeting with a prospective
client, who in consequence has decided not to engage our firm to
provide $1.3 million of legal services, thereby causing my firm
to lose specified profits? In this instance I would be arguing for
consequential damages -- i.e., damages incurred as a consequence
of the breach. The contract law rightly says that such damages
may be recovered only when they are either (1) reasonably foreseeable
at the time the contract was made, or (2) expressly contemplated
in the contract itself as compensable damages in the event of a
breach. In the example given above, the dry-cleaner would almost
certainly prevail by arguing that it could not reasonably foresee
that its failure to clean my clothing could result in such enormous
losses for my law firm. It wouldn't be held responsible for my alleged
consequential damages. (If the dry-cleaner had properly prepared
its form contracts, it would have expressly disclaimed such responsibility
at the outset, making a case against it for consequential damages
untenable from the start).
Most but not all commercial contracts also award attorney's
fees to the prevailing party, meaning that the aggrieved party,
if he brings suit for breach or misperformance of the contract,
can recover his attorney's fees, but only on condition that he prevail
in the suit; but if he loses the suit, the other party, having been
found not to have committed any breach or misperformance, is entitled
to recovery of attorney's fees incurred to prove his innocence in
the matter.
In some instances, money damages simply will not suffice to recompense
the aggrieved party. This is true where the offending party promised
to give something of unique or irreplaceable value to the aggrieved
party, but then breached his obligation to do so. In such a case,
the aggrieved party may assert that no sum of money can recompense
him adequately, and he may insist on specific performance of
the contract. The aggrieved party in such a case argues in effect
that he can enjoy the benefit of his bargain only if he can compel
performance of the bargain itself. It is not possible for a mere
award of money to put him in the position he would have enjoyed
had the bargain been performed. The bargain must therefore be performed.
But the courts rarely compel the specific performance of a contract,
save where it is one for the sale of real estate, since every parcel
of real property is deemed to be unique, special, and uniquely valuable
to its owner. There are other kinds of contracts that can be specifically
enforced, but their number is limited and dwindling in an unsentimental,
commercial world in which the payment of money is usually deemed
the proper remedy for every loss or disappointment suffered.
Under certain circumstances, an aggrieved party can avoid a contract
that he previously agreed to make. This is known as rescission
or avoidance of the contract. By this relief, the parties are
to be placed in the position in which they found themselves before
the contract was made. Suppose that you and I make a contract for
the purchase of goods, and the contract calls for me to make a deposit
at your store and obliges me to complete my purchase of your goods
at a stated time. But afterwards I establish that I am entitled
to a rescission of the contract. In this event I am not only excused
from the obligation to purchase your goods, but am also entitled
to a refund of the deposit, along with any incidental damages.
Rescission is always available to those who have been defrauded
by false representations into agreeing to unfair contracts (this
point is discussed further below). Rescission is also available
to relieve aggrieved parties from unconscionable contracts - typically,
deceitful contracts on pre-printed forms with hidden, "surprising"
terms that are utterly unfair and one-sided to the point of being
oppressive.
Illegal contracts, in contrast, are not voidable at the election
of the aggrieved party. Rather, they are deemed void ab initio,
which is to say, invalid and without legal effect from the outset.
Fraud. I alluded above to the use of fraud to trick a party
into accepting an unfair contract. Let me return to this point,
which unfortunately arises all the time in commercial and private
dealings. Trickery, deceit, and treachery are as old as humanity
itself. The different kinds of deceit used are as wide-ranging and
varied as human invention and imagination allow.
Sometimes a party to a contract will belatedly discover that he
was duped into agreeing to it in the first place. Such a party might
wish to be excused from performing the contract on the related grounds
of intentional and negligent misrepresentation.
Misrepresentation is said to occur when the following events occur
during pre-contract negotiations:
-- One party (the offending party) states a matter of "material"
fact to the other, doing so in effort to induce the other party
(the deceived party) to agree to a proposed contract;
-- The deceived party, having heard the statement, is induced by
it to enter into the proposed contract, and under the circumstances
it is reasonable for him to have relied on the statement and to
have been induced by it to enter into the proposed contract;
-- The statement proves to be false;
-- The offending party either knew at the time that it was false
(intentional misrepresentation) or recklessly made the statement
without regard to whether it was true or false (negligent misrepresentation).
-- Having been thus induced into the proposed contract on the basis
of false statement of material fact, the deceived party suffers
proximate losses in consequence.
If the deceived party can prove each of these points, he can make
a claim against the offending party for intentional or negligent
misrepresentation, which, once proven, entitles him to either (1)
rescission of the contract, restitution of sums given, and incidental
damages; or (2) all losses proximately caused by the fraud. The
deceived party may elect his remedy after proving his case. Since
both intentional and negligent misrepresentation arise by definition
from the fraudulent behavior of the offending party, the deceived
party can also seek and recover punitive/exemplary damages.
Conclusion. Different kinds of contracts are used to accomplish
different purposes. For example, leases are used to sell the possession
of real property for a specified term, while contracts for sale
of property are used for the sale and transfer of title to real
property. Insurance contracts are used to sell insurance against
loss in exchange for certain payments at specified intervals. When
you order a plate of pasta, you have made a contract with restaurant
where you have ordered it. The list of actual and possible contracts
is infinite: Contracts are the means by which legal persons in
our society agree to exchange goods, services and other valuable
things.
All such contracts are nothing other than private agreements between
parties, who by their agreement become obligated to exchange valuable
benefits with each another. The contract law makes such agreements
enforceable, which means that an aggrieved party can seek money
damages or sometimes even specific performance from the party who
allegedly breached or misperformed the contract.
This monograph is by no means a comprehensive, exhaustive catalogue
of the many and complicated principles of contract law. It is meant
rather to give an overview and sampling of this body of law. If
it succeeds at providing this to the reader in understandable English,
then it has accomplished its modest purposes.
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