Applicable Law
All contracts are governed by either Common Law or the UCC Article 2. Whether the contract is a sale of goods determines which applies.
UCC
The UCC Article 2 governs the sale of goods. Additionally, if the parties of the K are both merchants, special rules apply.
Common Law
Any K that does not involve the sale of goods should be treated under common law contract principles.
Mixed Deals
If a K involves both goods and services, the PREDOMINANT PURPOSE dictates the applicable law.
-If the K DIVIDES payment of goods from any services, apply UCC and CL to each portion separately.
Formation
All Ks require valid offer, acceptance, and consideration to be binding.
Offer
A proposal manifesting a PRESENT INTENT to K that creates a power of acceptance.
-A reasonable person standard is applied to “intent” determination.
Termination of Offer
An offer may be terminated by an act of the parties or by operation of law.
Acceptance
At Common Law - a valid acceptance must MIRROR the OFFER’S TERMS (Mirror Image Rule).
At UCC - if additional terms are added during acceptance, still valid unless material change. A MERCHANT can also accept by PROMPT SHIPMENT or promise to ship.
Male Box Rule - Delayed communications (mail); Offers and Revocations effective upon RECEIPT, but Acceptance is effective upon DISPATCH.
Consideration
A BARGAINED-FOR LEGAL DETRIMENT incurred by EACH PARTY to a K by promise, forbearance, or performance.
A PRE-EXISTING LEGAL DUTY is NOT consideration.
-SUBSTITUTES: Promissory Estoppel, Good Faith Modification under UCC, and past debts given new written promise.
Defenses to Formation (IF D SCUMM P)
There are many defenses to an otherwise valid formation of K that invalids the contract.
-Duress
-Public Policy
Capacity
Infants and mentally incompetent persons do not hold capacity to contract.
Statute of Frauds
Certain Ks must satisfy SoFs thru a WRITING, SIGNED by the party attempting to invalidate.
Required for:
Unconscionability, Illegality, Fraud, and Duress
Unconscionability - If Unfair Surprise (Procedural) or hidden oppressive terms (Substantive), not enforceable.
Illegality - if illegal subject matter or know illegal purpose AT TIME OF K, not enforceable.
Fraud/Misrepresentation - if false assertions, concealment, or misstatements about a MATERIAL FACT were RELIED UPON, not enforceable.
Duress - if K made while under ECONOMIC or PHYSICAL coercion, not enforceable.
Mistake and Misunderstanding
Misunderstanding - K viodable if: 1) material term is reasonably susceptible to multiple interpretations, 2) each party ATTACHES different meaning, and 3) neither KNEW OF the others interpretation.
Mistake - K voidable if: 1) BOTH parties are mistaken, 2) it concerns a BASIC ASSUMPTION of fact, 3) it MATERIALLY AFFECTS K, and 4) adversely affected party did not bear the burden of risk.
Unilateral Mistake - if one party was mistaken, AND OTHER PARTY KNEW OF MISTAKE, K is voidable.
Interpretation of Terms
If there is a dispute as to the meaning of the terms in a K, we analyze in the following order:
1) Course of Performance (same parties, same K type)
2) Course of Dealing (same parties; different, but similar, K)
3) Custom and Usage in industry.
Parol Evidence Rule
If a written K is a COMPLETE AND FINAL INTEGRATION, evidence of a prior agreement is INADMISSIBLE.
Exceptions: mistake in integration, an ambiguity in terms, defenses, or subsequent modification will allow prior evidence.
UCC Default Terms for Delivery and Risk of Loss
The UCC has default standards for both delivery and risk of loss of goods.
FOB - location = risk of loss passes once seller delivers to location (can be to common carrier if seller’s city).
Warranties
UCC attaches warranties to any sale of goods:
Conditions
Terms that create the obligation of performance. Can be conditions PRECEDENT, CONCURRENT, or SUBSEQUENT.
Express Conditions
If a condition exists that is express in the K, strict liability is imposed (party MUST perform to specifications).
Exceptions: Good faith/Avoidance of forfeiture (think Reading Pipes), Estoppel, or Waiver.
Substantial Performance
Common Law K conditions - if one party has begun performance and completed a “SUBSTANTIAL” amount, opposing party is obligated to perform (they can seek damages for the remaining performance omitted).
Perfect Tender (UCC)
Under a UCC K, the seller is required to deliver PERFECT GOODS (fulfill any conditions in K for goods).
Rejection of Goods
If not a perfect tender of goods, the buyer can accept all, reject all, or accept conforming and reject rest (then sue for damages to make whole).
For a valid Rejection, buyer must:
Seller’s Ability to Cure
Upon receiving notice of an imperfect tender of goods, a seller may cure if:
-time for performance has not lapsed,
-seller reasonably believed nonconformity was acceptable,
or
-seller gives buyer notice of intent to cure.