Contract Law Crash Course
Contract Law Crash Course
Contract Law Crash Course
CONTRACT FORMATION
CONSTRUING CONTRACTS
VITIATING CONTRACTS
- Mistake
o Unilateral mistake: only one party has made a mistake
Generally, will be held to their promise
Mistake as to identity may cause contract to be void as though the
contract had never been
Identity must be material
Must be intention to contract with someone else
Other party ought to know that the identity was important
If dealings were face-to-face law will assume that it was
intended to contract with the person in front of you
o Non est factum: if a person is unable to read the document or understand its
nature, they will not be bound contract void
Generally, only available to a special class of people (some form of
restraint on understanding)
o Common mistake: both parties make the same mistake as to the existence of
some objects/state of affairs which is crucial to the contract and neither party
took responsibility for the statement that it exists void
E.g. buying a book that doesn't exist (not by fault of either party)
o Mutual mistake: parties make different mistakes and nobody can prove they
are right void
- Misrepresentation
o Must be false statement about a past or present fact
Statements about the future generally cannot be misrepresentation
Statement must be made by one contracting party (or agent) to another
Statement has to be made at or before contract formation
Statement has to be made intending to induce entry into the contract
Statement actually does induce entry
o Innocent misrepresentation: representor believes they are telling the truth
contract can be rescinded (representee can choose to set contract aside)
o Fraudulent misrepresentation (Derry v Peek): representor misrepresents
knowingly or without believing in the statement or recklessly contract can
be rescinded and damages claimed
o Negligent misrepresentation (Hedley Bryne v Heller): representator under a
duty to tell the truth, but breaches their duty to do so, resulting in representee
suffering loss/damage contract can be rescinded and damages claimed
o Statutory provisions prohibiting corporations making misleading statements
about goods/services pecuniary penalty (fine)
- Promissory estoppel (does not require an actual contract being formed, or
consideration & offers wider range of remedies) use when promisor made a
promise to not insist upon his strict legal rights against promisee in relation to the
promise
o Requirements
Must be a representation or assumption which turns out to be wrong
Assumption must be encouraged/induced by the target of the estoppel
Mere expression of hope is not enough
Innocent party must actually rely on the assumption/representation
Party making the statement must intend for it to be relied on/know it
will be relied on
Innocent party must suffer some harm as a result of relying on the
representation
o Doctrine can only be used as a defence
o Wide range of remedy available at the courts' discretion
- Unconscionable dealing: conduct so contrary to good conscience that it cannot be
permitted
o Occurs when one party is under a special disadvantage and the other party
knows/ought to know the disadvantage and takes advantage of it
o Usual remedy is rescission (to place innocent party in the position before the
contract was formed)
- Undue influence and duress
o Undue influence: when a party enters into a contract without agreeing to the
terms of the contract but rather talked into contract by improper influence by
some other party
Influence is improper when there is an ulterior motive
Actual undue influence: when there is evidence of the influential party
taking advantage of their position
Presumed undue influence: where the relationship between two parties
gives rise to a presumption that there is undue influence, even if there
is no evidence (Hartigan)
When two parties are involved in certain relationship (e.g.
parent/child, lawyer/client, doctor/patient) but as long as the
nature of relationship involves someone assuming
responsibility for advising/guiding a vulnerable person
Person with upper hand will not be able to enforce contract
But rebuttable – if person can show that they were not taking
advantage of their position & if other person had independent
advice and fully understand what they entered
o Duress: where actual threat is used to secure a contract (physical, economic,
other harm)
Usual remedy is rescission, or may sometimes be restitution
- Illegality
o Any contract to commit a crime, tort or a fraud will be void
o Courts will not enforce contracts seeking to defeat the administration of justice
o Contracts seeking to oust the jurisdiction of the courts will not be enforced
o Contracts may be specifically invalidated by statutory schemes
- Restraint of trade clauses prevent the other party from becoming your direct
commercial competitor
o Clauses must be reasonably in the interests of the parties (scope, time, activity,
bargaining power) and in the interests of the public (difficulty caused to
public?) otherwise unenforceable
ENDING A CONTRACT
- Termination by performance
o General principle: Obligations under the contract must be absolutely and
exactly completed (Cutter v Powell)
o Exception: if obligations under a contract can be sensibly divided party
might be paid for the work they did
o Exception: if an obligation has been substantially performed, some trifling
falling cannot justify a refusal to pay (de minimus rule) (Hoenig v Isaacs)
o Exception: if a party accepts part performance of an obligation, they cannot
rely on Cutter v Powell
- Termination by agreement
o Contract contains term on how/when contract might end (e.g. expiry dates)
o Where the contract commences only if some condition precedent occurs, and
the precedent fails, the contract will have never commenced
o Where a condition subsequent occurs, then this ends the contract
o Contract can also end where parties agree on it
- Termination by frustration
o Destruction of subject matter at neither parties' fault (Taylor v Caldwell)
o Where whole basis of contract is destroyed at neither parties' fault (Krell v
Henry)
o If contract is simply more difficult or expensive to complete, it is not
frustrated
Has to be rendered to be a different contract/performance would be
completely different
o Frustration only affects future obligations
o Consequence of frustration:
If there was total failure of consideration rescission
If no total failure of consideration losses lie where they fall (i.e.
parties walk away at whatever the situation is after frustrating event)
- Termination by breach
o Breach of conditions innocent party may end contract
o Breach of warranties contract will continue but innocent party may claim
damages
o Repudiation: when a party walks away from their obligations without
completing them
Innocent party may terminate contract, demand party to meet their
promise/pay damages otherwise
Anticipatory breach: when the other party is clearly going to breach
can terminate contract for breach and sue for damages immediately
- Death of offeror
o Personal representative may still be bound by acceptance unless offeree knew
of offeror's death
- Unilateral contract may be terminated only before performance