Contract Law Basics
Consideration
• Promises – the law does not enforce promises per se.
o Promises of gifts are not enforceable.
o The law considers the spirit of altruism rare.
• What criteria should we use to categorize the subset of promises that attract legal enforceability?
o What would be a sensible way to do this?
o The promises which the law should be designed to enforce should be “serious promises”.
• Non-trivial
• Or seriously-intended
o This is approximately the majority approach of the world’s legal systems.
• The majority of the world uses the civil system
• In Qc. law, there is a proposition that goes back to Roman law, that a cause is enforceable (from Latin, causa).
• This is a straightforward approach. “We’ll enforce where there is a good reason.”
o This is intuitive. It is not a technical rule – aligns with the ordinary instinct of ordinary law.
o This is not the approach that we take.
• What criteria should be use to categorize the subset of promises that attract legal enforceability…?
o Could go from the intuitive approach
o The Roman approach used formality.
• If ppl want to know that their arrangement is enforceable, then we could have (in our legal scheme), a way to formally attach something to their promise…
• The act of “attaching” something to the promise could act as a signal that it is meant to be enforceable.
• Ex: ‘A promise in writing could signify that a party meant for it to be enforced.’
• Ex: Signature – could make it so that something would have to be signed to be an enforceable promise [problem with this is that every contract, in order to be enforceable, would require this – even simple transactions between vendor/purchaser]
• “stamps” – issued by gov
• shaking hands, spitting and shaking hands
• In Rome, the parties stood facing one another, and recited to one another the terms of the contract. Stipulatia
• Ex: “I _____, take you _______…”
• We do not work under this system
o Exception: Promises made under seal are enforceable. This is a hold-over of (at least) the middle ages.
• In order to give, must have intention (animus) and transfer.
• (as well as offer, acceptance, and consideration).
o Some things are not susceptible to manual tradition.
• Shares (Choses in action) – how does one give a share?
• Primarily, we no longer use “seals”
• Scenario:
o Person A promises person B a plane ticket to Florida. Person B goes out and makes purchases for the trip, racking up expenses of $150. Person A’s circumstances change, and the offer for the ticked is revoked.
• What if Person B sues Person A for the $150, to put them back into the circumstances where they were (it is obvious that they would lose a suit for the cost of the ticket itself).
• The court, for the most part, does not recognize even reasonable reliance on promises.
o Our legal system does not enforce any promises that are not contained within a contract.
• [American language] The law enforces bargains – something for something – a trade-off.
• In order to approach these cases, must recontextualize
o If the problem in front of you has nothing to do with offer/acceptance (more to do with whether there was consideration [I offer you my car for $1000; I accept]), then this type of analysis will get you nowhere.
o Will need to identify a consideration problem, which will lead to an abandonment of offerer/offeree.
• “I promise to convey title to my car to you if you pay me $1000.” “I promise to pay you $1000 if you convey to me the title to your car.”
• Same sale transaction constructed as an exchange of promises.
• In a contract, both parties are promisers, and both are promisees.
• When we try to analyse whether there was consideration, we need to use the language of promisers/promisees.
• Consideration is what you paid to the other side in exchange for the other side’s promise.
• Can view the formation of a contract as an exchange of promises.
• By the time the parties get to court, one party is suing the other (at least).
• Plaintiff and defendant
• Plaintiff is always suing in his/her capacity as promisee, and the defendant is defending in his/her capacity as promiser
o By the time we get to litigation, only one of the original two-fold promiser/promisee relationships is relevant.
o The one that is relevant is the relation whereby one allegedly promised something to the other, and broke that alleged promise.
o In a contracts case, every defendant is an alleged promise-breaker; every plaintiff is a disappointed (alleged) promisee.
• Mu st understand which of the two promises is broken.
• All contract litigation (besides the odd exception, of course…), it will always be promisee vs. promiser.
• “Why is the plaintiff in a contracts case always suing as promisee?”
• “Why is the defendant in a contracts case always defending in their capacity as promiser?”
Dalhousie College v. Boutilier
• Boutilier does promise Dalhousie $5000.
• Dalhousie, however, does not promise Boutilier anything.
o Yes, they built building, etc., but they did not promise Boutilier that this would be in exhange for this $5000.
o They promised him nothing – it was not a bargain; not something for something; not an exchange.
o Even if these buildings, purchasers, etc., had been made on the strength of his promise, that does not retroactively convert his promise into a contract promise.
• Subscription form: Does Boutilier not say, “In consideration of the subscription of others…”?
o Why is this not consideration?
• His motivation is irrelevant. Motive is not consideration.
• They did not promise to rely on his $5000
o Mere reliance
o Only kind that matters is “bargained-for reliance” – if they had bargained their ability build buildings for his $5000, it might have been consideration.
• The difference is how the parties treated the building of the building.
• Dal did not do it in exachange for his $5000.
• He promised, and they reacted by building the building – this is not consideration.
**Nothing is consideration, unless the parties have handled it as consideration.**
“To hold otherwise would be to hold that a naked, voluntary promise may be converted into a binding legal contract by the subsequent action of the promisee alone without the consent, express or implied, of the promisor.” P 357 para 6.
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